Gay marriage is permitted in Mexico
City as well as in several states but the president has proposed changing the
constitution to allow it nationally
Thousands of Catholics and conservatives march against the legalisation of same-sex marriage in Guadalajara City, Mexico, on 10 September, 2016. The banner reads ‘I stand for my family’. Photograph: Reuters
Tens of thousands of people across Mexico marched
on Saturday to protest against gay marriage, challenging President Enrique Peña
Nieto’s proposal to recognise same-sex marriage throughout the traditionally
conservative country.
The
marches were called by the National Front for the Family, a coalition of civil
society organisations and various religious groups, and continued throughout
the day from Mexico’s far north to the Yucatan peninsula.
Same-sex
marriage is permitted in Mexico City, as well as in several states including
Coahuila, Quintana Roo, Jalisco, Nayarit, Chihuahua and Sonora.
Peña Nieto
has proposed changing the constitution to allow it nationally.
The embattled leader, who is grappling
with discontent over a slowing economy, conflict-of-interest scandals,
drug-gang violence and a visit by the US presidential hopeful Donald Trump that
led to his finance minister’s ouster, has opened himself to criticism by asking
lawmakers to debate gay marriage.
“It’s
pulling on the noose,” said Victor Sanchez, a sociologist at Colegio de la
Frontera Norte in Tijuana. “This comes as the government is showing a certain
sort of fragility in other areas ... and they’re taking advantage of the
moment.”
Peña Nieto
says congress should debate and settle the issue of gay marriage.
By mid-day on Saturday, an estimated
40,000 people converged on the city of Querétaro in central Mexico, during a
peaceful 3 to 4 kilometre march through the city, one of the largest gatherings
in the country, Civil Protection officers said.
“I think
it was something unprecedented, the awakening of the society of Querétaro in
defence of the family,” said Jose Alcantara, an organiser with the National
Front for the Family, adding the group had gathered more than 100,000
signatures against the proposal.
Ary Campos
Martinez, a spokesperson for Civil Protection in the city of Puebla in central
Mexico, said officers had originally expected roughly 5,000 marchers, but were
working to monitor a crowd of approximately 12,000 by midday.
In the
northern city of Monterrey, others came to a central plaza in counter-protest
of the marches to sing and read poetry.
“It’s a
discriminatory position and we hope it doesn’t have success,” said Jesus
Gonzalez, 38, a human rights activist.
Mexico’s
supreme court said last year that laws restricting marriage to a man and woman
were unconstitutional. However, many state legislatures have not changed their
statutes to comply, meaning couples must file legal challenges on a
case-by-case basis to get married.
Gay
marriage is still banned under local laws in many of Mexico’s 31 states.
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