| 10.12.2009 | Vienna
Austria passes Registered
Partnership Law
Austrian federal parliament (the
“Nationalrat”) today (on the International Day of Human
Rights) passed a law on registered partnership for same-sex
couples (110 : 64 votes). When the law enters into force on
1st Jan 2010 Austria will become the 18th state in Europe
legally recognizing same-sex couples. Rechtskomitee
LAMBDA (RKL), Austria’s civil rights organisation for
homo- and bisexual as well as transgender women and men,
welcomes that Austria finally found its way into the 20th
century, and deplores that it did not make it into the 21st
century.
The new law enshrines
43 differences (at a minimum) to marriage. This is the
worst partnership-law for same-sex couples in Europe.
Besides France, Luxemburg and Andorra (which introduced
registered partnership for hetero- and homosexual
couples, a completely different concept) no other
European country made so many distinctions between
marriage and registered partnership.
The Conservative Party invested remarkable energy in the
prevention of all references to family and children. Any
rights and benefits married partners receive for their
step-children are thought to be withheld from registered
partners or granted under greater restrictions then for
married step-parents (even in the context of leave for
hospice care).
Artificial insemination (available even to unmarried
heterosexual couples) will be explicitly outlawed for
same-sex couples and step-parent adoption prohibited.
Sexual apartheid
Registered partnership requires a minimum age of 18
while marriage can be entered into as of 16. And
same-sex couples are banned from the civil registry
(“Standesamt”) where civil marriages are performed.
Same-sex partnerships have to be registered in different
offices, the so-called District Administrative
Authorities (“Bezirksverwaltungsbehörden”), where
passports, id-cards, residence-permits, driving-licences
and trade-licences have to be applied for.
While marriages have to be performed in a (decent) way
that corresponds to the importance of a wedding, there
is no such provision for registered partnerships. In
addition registration of partnerships must take place in
the bureau of the authority while marriage may be
performed at any other places like palaces, ships,
hotels etc..
Forced Outing
One of the most absurd discriminations is the one
regarding family names. Austrian law so far knows two
categories of names: forenames and family-names. Every
person has (at least) one forename and one family-name.
The bill on registered partnership creates a new (a
second) category of second-names: the “surname”. And
such (new) “surnames” are only for persons entering into
a registered partnership.
Who enters into a registered partnership will lose
his/her family-name. Both registered partners’ will keep
their second-names, but this name will cease to be a
“family-name” and ex lege be changed into a “surname”.
If “Müller” and “Mayer” enter into a registered
partnership they are keeping their names “Müller” and
“Mayer”, but not as “family-names” (as before
registration) but (new) as “surnames”.
Public branding
Registered partnership will be available only for
same-sex couples. And “surnames” will only be given to
registered partners. All other people keep their
second-names as family-names. So at each occasion where
the second-name has to be provided (as in official forms
like for the residence-register, for tax-declarations,
for applications for unemployment-benefits etc.),
registered partners are obliged to provide not (as all
other people) a “family-name” but a “surname”, and by
that are forced to out themselves as part of a gay
couple.
Already the refusal of opening up of marriage and the
creation of a separate legal institution lead to forced
outing of same-sex couples whenever they have to declare
their family-status (not “married” but “in registered
partnership”). But forced outing now will be even
extended to those occasions where not family-status but
(family-)name has to be provided (as in applications for
passports, id-cards, driving-licences, registration of
dogs etc.).
“Today we have passed from ‘no rights’ to sexual
apartheid”, says Dr. Helmut Graupner, president
of Rechtskomitee LAMBDA (RKL), “From now on we
will fight for marriage for all as real equality, for
the realization of the basic principle of justice which
we all have learned already as children on the
playground: One law for everyone!”
www.rklambda.at
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