NationStates Jolt Archive


Fall in line, Aruba!

Fass
29-08-2005, 23:09
http://www.365gay.com/newscon05/08/082405Aruba.htm

Aruba Ordered To Register Gay Marriages
by The Associated Press

(Oranjestad, Aruba) A lesbian couple has the right to register their marriage in Aruba, a court ruled Tuesday, rejecting a government appeal in a case that has exposed a cultural rift between Holland and its former colony.

Aruba's Superior Court confirmed a lower court's December ruling that the Caribbean island should register the marriage of Charlene and Esther Oduber-Lamers, who were wed in Holland in 2001.

"The Dutch marriage can be inscribed in the register," read the decision. "Since Aruba is part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, it must comply with demands of the Kingdom."

The Aruban government now has three months to take the case to Holland's Supreme Court, which it has promised to do.

"We give neither legal nor moral recognition to same-sex marriages," Ruben Trapenberg, spokesman for Aruban Prime Minister Nelson Oduber, said Tuesday.

The women are currently living in Holland (story) and were not immediately available for comment, but the Dutch group Lesbian and Bisexual Federation of the Netherlands praised the ruling.

"It acknowledges that gays and lesbians in Aruba have rights," said Andre van Wanrooij, a spokesman for the Holland-based group.

The women sued Aruba's government for discrimination last year after the Public Registry rejected their marriage certificate. The government argued the civil code did not allow for same-sex marriage and that it would go against Aruba's way of life.

Not having their marriage recognized meant Esther could not get health benefits from Charlene's job at the Aruban Department of Social Affairs or stay on the island for more than six months a year under Aruban immigration laws.

Charlene, a 33-year-old Aruba native, and Esther, a 38-year-old Dutch citizen, fled the island for Holland in November after being harassed when they tried to register as a married couple.

Aruba, which lies off the northern coast of Venezuela, is an autonomous republic that forms part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.

Dutch statutes require that all members of the Kingdom - Aruba, Holland and the Dutch Antilles - recognize each other's legal documents, including marriage certificates.

Holland legalized gay marriage in 2001, but Aruban officials argue that Dutch law also grants the island the right to self-rule - permitting it to ignore Holland's legalization of gay marriage.

Behind the dispute are deep cultural differences between Holland and Aruba, which shares more with Latin America than Europe.

While Dutch is the official language, most Arubans speak Papiamento, a Creole language that has absorbed words from Spanish, Dutch, English and Portuguese.

More than 80 percent of the island's 97,000 people are Catholic, and the largest number of immigrants come from Venezuela and Colombia.

Few people are openly gay on the island, and locals say many gay residents move to Holland rather than face persecution at home.

---------------------------------------------------

As much as I dislike the vestiges of colonialism, it can most certainly be a force for good sometimes. It's also nice to see that Aruba has more important things to deal with than looking for airheaded American tourists and that Queen of the Irrelevant, Greta van Susteren. :D
New Watenho
29-08-2005, 23:15
Is Aruba actually part of Holland, as in, not Dutch-owned but literally part of the country itself - the same way France used to consider Algeria as literally French territory? Just something about the way the article phrases it. If so, then it makes no sense that a national law should apply to one part of it but not to another.
Ashmoria
29-08-2005, 23:20
gee they allow pretty much everything else in aruba why draw the line at gay marriage?
Sinuhue
29-08-2005, 23:21
Aruba, Jamaica, oh I wanna take a,
to Bermuda, Bahama, come on pretty mama....
Fass
29-08-2005, 23:23
Is Aruba actually part of Holland, as in, not Dutch-owned but literally part of the country itself - the same way France used to consider Algeria as literally French territory?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_the_Netherlands

The Kingdom of the Netherlands (Dutch: Koninkrijk der Nederlanden) currently consists of the three constituent parts: the mainland European Netherlands (Dutch: Nederland), Netherlands Antilles (Dutch: Nederlandse Antillen) and Aruba.

From what I gather, it is autonomous, but still has to recognise the law of the other parts of the Realm.
New Watenho
29-08-2005, 23:29
Thank you, Fass. If the distinctions between those laws are anything like the Federal/State law distinctions in the USA, I understand :)
Katzistanza
30-08-2005, 00:07
All I can say is, good on that judge, and fuck imperialism
Ravenshrike
30-08-2005, 00:19
From what I gather, it is autonomous, but still has to recognise the law of the other parts of the Realm.
Then they have two choices, they can either STFU about it or they can revolt. With that small of an island however, revolting would probably be a bad idea.
Sdaeriji
30-08-2005, 00:25
All I can say is, good on that judge, and fuck imperialism

Unfortunately, I have to agree.
Katzistanza
30-08-2005, 00:44
Unfortunately, I have to agree.

"Unfortunately"?
Dobbsworld
30-08-2005, 01:21
Well, there's imperialism, and then there's imperialism with daiquiris and white sandy beaches. :cool:
Teh_pantless_hero
30-08-2005, 01:36
gee they allow pretty much everything else in aruba why draw the line at gay marriage?
They are opposed to butt sex?