Gay Chinese Man Sues Government Over Denial of Right to Marry Partner

2015-12-21
 
20151222bcb6350f-f604-421b-81b4-e65ced9ed20c.jpeg (622×385)
Youngsters hold rainbow flags, a symbol for homosexuals, as they march on the street during an anti-discrimination parade in Changsha, central China's Hunan province, May 17, 2013.
 AFP
 
A gay man in the central Chinese province of Hunan has filed a lawsuit against the government for refusing his application to marry his male partner, in a move that has been hailed as a major test case for LGBT rights in the country, his lawyer told RFA on Monday.
 
Sun Wenlin, 26, filed the complaint against the Furong district civil affairs bureau in Hunan's provincial capital Changsha earlier this month, challenging the bureau's refusal to allow the couple to register their marriage.
 
Sun is arguing that current Chinese marriage law refers to the union of "husband and wife," but without specifying the gender of either party to the marriage.
 
The argument rests on the idea that a person can identify as a husband or a wife without reference to their gender.
 
The complaint was filed at the Furong District People's Court, which has until Dec. 23 to decide if it will accept the case.
 
Sun told the Wall Street Journal's China Real Time blog: "We just hope that we can legally become each other’s family in our own country someday in our lifetime."
 
"Our most basic desires and rights have been denied, and this is very difficult to vindicate. I feel very angry," he said.
 
A 'sensitive' case
 
Meanwhile, Sun's lawyer Shi Fulong told RFA that the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people have yet to fully enter public awareness in China.
 
"We have filed this administrative complaint because the civil affairs bureau failed to carry out its duty to register marriages," Shi said. "We are appealing to the court to order it to proceed."
 
He said the gradual liberalization of gay marriage in Western countries and some U.S. states has paved the way for changing attitudes in China.
 
"Gay marriage is now legal in a lot of countries, which affects a lot of individual rights including property rights and inheritance, as well as matters relating to children," Shi said.
 
"All of these things are inherently tied up with marriage, and homosexuality is also subject to social conventions and questions of cultural tradition," he said.
 
Shi said he hopes the case won't be regarded as "sensitive" by the authorities.
 
  
"In my view, there's no such thing as a sensitive case, because from a lawyer's point of view, all clients are equal," he said.
 
"We won't treat our clients differently because of their ethnicity, their sexual orientation, or other differences."
 
Long way to go
 
A Guangzhou resident who runs a support group for the friends and relatives of LGBT people said there is still a long way to go for LGBT rights in China, but welcomed Sun's lawsuit.
 
"This is the first case to do with gay marriage in this country ... and really it's quite epoch-making," the man, who gave only a nickname A Qiang, said.
 
"For gay marriage to become legal, it will have to win broad public support, and at the moment only about 22 percent support it, or thereabouts," he said.
 
"There is still a long way to go for gay marriage in China, but the good thing is that there has been huge change [globally] in the past decade or so, and the overall trend is towards legalizing gay marriage," he said.
 
Sun's case comes after Guangzhou-based lesbian Qiu Bai filed a lawsuit against the government after it approved and disseminated university textbooks describing homosexuality as a "psychological disorder."
 
Qiu took legal action against the ministry of education in Beijing after reading discriminatory language in a nationwide student psychological handbook published by the prestigious Renmin University.
 
Changing attitudes
 
However, there are signs of shifting attitudes among the younger generation, and among some companies.
 
How many Chinese would identify themselves as gay is unknown, as social stigma associated with homosexuality remains widespread, with many choosing to marry despite their orientation.
 
More and more educated urban Chinese have begun coming out in recent years, while the gay dating app Blued has estimated that China is home to 13 million gay men, and says it currently has three million users.
 
Last February, Internet giant Alibaba paid for 10 same-sex couples to get married in California, as part of a contest it said would help to promote LGBT rights.
 
 
 
For detail please visit here
民主中国 | minzhuzhongguo.org

Gay Chinese Man Sues Government Over Denial of Right to Marry Partner

2015-12-21
 
20151222bcb6350f-f604-421b-81b4-e65ced9ed20c.jpeg (622×385)
Youngsters hold rainbow flags, a symbol for homosexuals, as they march on the street during an anti-discrimination parade in Changsha, central China's Hunan province, May 17, 2013.
 AFP
 
A gay man in the central Chinese province of Hunan has filed a lawsuit against the government for refusing his application to marry his male partner, in a move that has been hailed as a major test case for LGBT rights in the country, his lawyer told RFA on Monday.
 
Sun Wenlin, 26, filed the complaint against the Furong district civil affairs bureau in Hunan's provincial capital Changsha earlier this month, challenging the bureau's refusal to allow the couple to register their marriage.
 
Sun is arguing that current Chinese marriage law refers to the union of "husband and wife," but without specifying the gender of either party to the marriage.
 
The argument rests on the idea that a person can identify as a husband or a wife without reference to their gender.
 
The complaint was filed at the Furong District People's Court, which has until Dec. 23 to decide if it will accept the case.
 
Sun told the Wall Street Journal's China Real Time blog: "We just hope that we can legally become each other’s family in our own country someday in our lifetime."
 
"Our most basic desires and rights have been denied, and this is very difficult to vindicate. I feel very angry," he said.
 
A 'sensitive' case
 
Meanwhile, Sun's lawyer Shi Fulong told RFA that the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people have yet to fully enter public awareness in China.
 
"We have filed this administrative complaint because the civil affairs bureau failed to carry out its duty to register marriages," Shi said. "We are appealing to the court to order it to proceed."
 
He said the gradual liberalization of gay marriage in Western countries and some U.S. states has paved the way for changing attitudes in China.
 
"Gay marriage is now legal in a lot of countries, which affects a lot of individual rights including property rights and inheritance, as well as matters relating to children," Shi said.
 
"All of these things are inherently tied up with marriage, and homosexuality is also subject to social conventions and questions of cultural tradition," he said.
 
Shi said he hopes the case won't be regarded as "sensitive" by the authorities.
 
  
"In my view, there's no such thing as a sensitive case, because from a lawyer's point of view, all clients are equal," he said.
 
"We won't treat our clients differently because of their ethnicity, their sexual orientation, or other differences."
 
Long way to go
 
A Guangzhou resident who runs a support group for the friends and relatives of LGBT people said there is still a long way to go for LGBT rights in China, but welcomed Sun's lawsuit.
 
"This is the first case to do with gay marriage in this country ... and really it's quite epoch-making," the man, who gave only a nickname A Qiang, said.
 
"For gay marriage to become legal, it will have to win broad public support, and at the moment only about 22 percent support it, or thereabouts," he said.
 
"There is still a long way to go for gay marriage in China, but the good thing is that there has been huge change [globally] in the past decade or so, and the overall trend is towards legalizing gay marriage," he said.
 
Sun's case comes after Guangzhou-based lesbian Qiu Bai filed a lawsuit against the government after it approved and disseminated university textbooks describing homosexuality as a "psychological disorder."
 
Qiu took legal action against the ministry of education in Beijing after reading discriminatory language in a nationwide student psychological handbook published by the prestigious Renmin University.
 
Changing attitudes
 
However, there are signs of shifting attitudes among the younger generation, and among some companies.
 
How many Chinese would identify themselves as gay is unknown, as social stigma associated with homosexuality remains widespread, with many choosing to marry despite their orientation.
 
More and more educated urban Chinese have begun coming out in recent years, while the gay dating app Blued has estimated that China is home to 13 million gay men, and says it currently has three million users.
 
Last February, Internet giant Alibaba paid for 10 same-sex couples to get married in California, as part of a contest it said would help to promote LGBT rights.
 
 
 
For detail please visit here