Estonia was never a Soviet country, they had been occupied by the Soviet Union for 45 years
-Lelixandre on
China has civil unions? This is news for me
Dear_Milk_4323 on
Brazil is shocking considering how Evangelical it is
NotPineapple999 on
It’s definitely not banned in Mongolia. It’s unrecognised at the very least.
Abject-Cranberry5941 on
For now
Mtfdurian on
A 2018 ruling declared that marriages from within the EU, regardless of gender, should be recognized within all of the EU for migration purposes.
This means that Romania and Bulgaria do have to recognize EU gay marriages and have to allow us to migrate with the same ease as straight couples.
The rest of the regulations, including divorce laws, are up to the states themselves. Notice that some of those countries may have additional hostile legislation towards non-straight couples, as we saw with Italy trying to abduct kids from lesbian parents.
capsrock02 on
Why is Israel red?
MustardLabs on
Easier for a gay couple to get married in Alabama than Italy.
Usagi2throwaway on
It’s not banned in Lithuania, it’s just… Unclear. As with other EU countries, all marriages officiated within the EU are recognised in Lithuania, including same-sex. Also, the Constitutional Court ruled that a marriage is a marriage regardless of the couple’s sex or gender, but Seimas, the country’s parliament, hasn’t passed any legislation on it yet, so the only way for a gay couple to get married currently is to apply for a marriage licence, get rejected, sue the marriage court, win (because of the constitutional court ruling), have the rejection overturned, and then get married. At least one couple has already gone this way in Vilnius, that I know of, and it seems others are in the process.
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Estonia was never a Soviet country, they had been occupied by the Soviet Union for 45 years
China has civil unions? This is news for me
Brazil is shocking considering how Evangelical it is
It’s definitely not banned in Mongolia. It’s unrecognised at the very least.
For now
A 2018 ruling declared that marriages from within the EU, regardless of gender, should be recognized within all of the EU for migration purposes.
This means that Romania and Bulgaria do have to recognize EU gay marriages and have to allow us to migrate with the same ease as straight couples.
The rest of the regulations, including divorce laws, are up to the states themselves. Notice that some of those countries may have additional hostile legislation towards non-straight couples, as we saw with Italy trying to abduct kids from lesbian parents.
Why is Israel red?
Easier for a gay couple to get married in Alabama than Italy.
It’s not banned in Lithuania, it’s just… Unclear. As with other EU countries, all marriages officiated within the EU are recognised in Lithuania, including same-sex. Also, the Constitutional Court ruled that a marriage is a marriage regardless of the couple’s sex or gender, but Seimas, the country’s parliament, hasn’t passed any legislation on it yet, so the only way for a gay couple to get married currently is to apply for a marriage licence, get rejected, sue the marriage court, win (because of the constitutional court ruling), have the rejection overturned, and then get married. At least one couple has already gone this way in Vilnius, that I know of, and it seems others are in the process.