Taiwan's parliament has legalised same-sex marriage in a landmark vote that made the self-ruled island the first in Asia to adopt such legislation.
The lawmakers comfortably passed a law on Friday,
allowing same-sex couples to form "exclusive permanent unions" and a
second clause that would let them apply for a "marriage registration"
with government agencies.
The vote is a major victory for the island's LGBT
community who have campaigned for years to have similar of equal
marriage rights as heterosexual couples and places the island at the
vanguard of Asia's burgeoning gay rights movement.
Hundreds of Gay Rights supporters on Friday gathered despite heavy rain near the parliament building in the capital, Taipei, as legislators were set to vote on a series of bills that could offer same-sex couples similar legal protections for marriage as heterosexuals.
The vote came after Taiwan's top court ruled that not allowing same-sex couples to marry violates the constitution. Judges gave the government until May 24,2019 to make the changes or see marriage equality enacted automatically. But they gave no guidance on how to do that
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