Current:Home > MyFirst same-sex married couple in Nepal vow to continue campaign for gay rights -FundPrime
First same-sex married couple in Nepal vow to continue campaign for gay rights
View
Date:2025-04-17 07:36:40
KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — The first gay couple in Nepal to have their same-sex marriage officially recognized vowed Friday to campaign for changes in the law to help others like them to get married.
Surendra Pandey and Maya Gurung were able to legally register their marriage at a village council office this week in the mountains west of the capital, Kathmandu.
Pandey is a man and Gurung is a transgender woman. Nepal does not allow its citizens to change the sex assigned at birth on their official documents.
“We will continue our campaign for same-sex marriage and fight to bring equality to sexual monitories in country so that generations of people will not have to suffer like we all did,” Gurung told reporters Friday in Kathmandu.
Other provisions in the law like inheritance, property rights and the right to adopt children have still to be updated in line with the recognition of same-sex-marriages.
The couple along with gay rights groups have been struggling for years to get the government to legally register same-sex marriages. Nepal is one of the first countries in Asia to recognize same-sex unions.
Earlier this year, Nepal’s supreme court issued an interim order enabling the registration of same-sex marriages for the first time.
Even after the court rulings, officials had initially refused to register the marriage. Along with Sunil Babu Pant, an openly gay former parliamentarian and leading LGBTQ+ rights activist, the couple filed cases with the Kathmandu District Court and High Court, but their pleas were rejected.
Earlier this week, the Home Ministry made changes to enable all local administration offices to register same-sex marriages.
The couple travelled back to Gurung’s village and got their marriage registered on Wednesday.
“Finally we have gotten legal recognition. Not just us, but all the sexual minority people who had been waiting anxiously for so long for this day are happy,” Pandey said.
Now the Himalayan nation has become the only second country in Asia and first in South Asia to allow it.
Gay rights activists have clarified that the new provisions in Nepal would now allow anyone to marry anyone with their sexual preference in the country.
Since 2011, Nepalis who do not identify as female or male are able to choose “third gender” on their passports and other government documents. The constitution adopted in 2015 also explicitly states there can be no discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.
“It is just not same sex marriage, but it is very inclusive” said Pant. “Now man can marry woman, which was already there. Now man can marry man, woman can marry woman, as we have three genders — male, female and others. Others can marry others also and others can marry man.”
“It is a whole lot of inclusive so I like to call it a rainbow marriage is possible in Nepal,” he said.
The couple married six years ago at a temple following Hindu tradition, with a priest conducting the rituals among friends and family. But they had no certificate showing their marriage was legal.
veryGood! (4745)
Related
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Paul George: 'I never wanted to leave' Clippers, but first offer 'kind of disrespectful'
- Opening statements to give roadmap to involuntary manslaughter case against Alec Baldwin
- Giannis Antetokounmpo will carry Greece's flag during Olympic opening ceremony
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Houston residents left sweltering after Beryl with over 1.7 million still lacking power
- Philadelphia won’t seek death penalty in Temple U. officer’s death. Colleagues and family are upset
- Meagan Good Reveals Every Friend Was Against Jonathan Majors Romance Amid Domestic Abuse Trial
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- What cognitive tests can show — and what they can’t
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Federal Reserve's Powell says more good data could open door to interest rate cuts
- Election officials push back against draft federal rule for reporting potential cyberattacks
- Taylor Swift Eras Tour: Sign language interpreters perform during Madrid show
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- BBC Journalist’s Wife and 2 Daughters Shot Dead in Crossbow Attack
- Mike Gundy's DUI comments are insane thing for college football coach to say
- New students at Eton, the poshest of Britain's elite private schools, will not be allowed smartphones
Recommendation
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Orioles' Jordan Westburg, Reds' Hunter Greene named MLB All-Stars as injury replacements
Kim Kardashian’s SKIMS Just Discounted Thousands of Styles: Shop Now or Miss Out on Your Favorites
Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy says Ollie Gordon II won't miss any games after arrest
Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
Pritzker signs law banning health insurance companies’ ‘predatory tactics,’ including step therapy
'Shrek 5' is in the works for 2026 with original cast including Mike Myers, Cameron Diaz
Clippers star Kawhi Leonard withdraws from US Olympic basketball team