Posts Tagged ‘divorce’

Premier divorce d’un couple homosexuel en France

Monday, November 4th, 2013

Le Monde

Un divorce “comme les autres” entre deux homosexuels a été prononcé lundi 28 octobre par un juge des affaires familiales au tribunal de grande instance de Toulouse. Un peu plus de cinq mois après la promulgation de la loi qui a ouvert le mariage aux personnes de même sexe, c’est le premier divorce connu d’un couple homosexuel en France, selon Mathieu Nocent, porte-parole de l’inter-LGBT.

Les deux Toulousains, âgés de 30 et 50, avaient célébré leur union à la fin de juin au Capitole. Pour Mme Glock, leur avocate, ce divorce est “un épiphénomène”, “un des effets secondaires du mariage”. “Des divorces, il y en a eu cinquante de prononcés dans la même journée. C’étaient tous les mêmes, tous la même souffrance”, a-t-elle déclaré. Pour ses deux clients au moins, ce divorce par consentement mutuel a été relativement simplifié par l’absence d’enfant et d’enjeu économique, a-t-elle rappelé.

UN MARIAGE SUR DEUX SE SOLDE PAR UN DIVORCE

Vous n’imaginez pas le nombre de gens qui vivent très longtemps ensemble et qui divorcent juste après le mariage”, comme ce fut le cas de ses clients, a-t-elle expliqué. Les deux hommes n’étaient pas des militants du mariage homosexuel, mais la volonté d’assurer à l’autre une protection patrimoniale avait contribué à leur décision de s’unir.

“Il va falloir s’y habituer. Quand on se marie, on divorce dans près d’un cas sur deux”, a rappelé Florence Bertocchio, de l’association Arc-en-Ciel Toulouse dans un article du Parisien.

Deux homosexuelles françaises mariées en 2011 aux Etats-Unis, et qui avaient pu faire reconnaître leur mariage cet été en France, ont également entamé une procédure de divorce à Paris.

Divorce aux jeux gais

Saturday, June 30th, 2012

Suite à un premier schisme au début des années 2000 résultant de la décision du comité montréalais de la Fédé- ration des Jeux Gais de se retirer de la fédération pour or- ganiser ses propres jeux, les premiers Outgames de 2006 et de l’échec lamentable de ces mêmes Outgames avec une faillite impliquant plus de 750 fournisseurs et la disparition de Louise Roy, alors Présidente montréalaise des Outgames, les deux organisations officielles avaient convenu de se réu- nir pour discuter de la réunification des équipes afin de ne proposer à l’avenir qu’une seule version de jeux gais sur le plan international.

Or, voici qu’au début mai, selon un communiqué de la FGG, les représentants des deux organisations, malgré plusieurs jours de travaux encore une fois à Montréal, en arrivaient à la conclusion qu’un accord ne serait pas possible à temps pour faire une annonce sur des jeux conjoints en 2018. Se- lon Kurt Dahl, co-Président de la FGG, les représentants de la GLISA à Montréal refusaient, le 6 mai dernier, une offre finale de la FGG. Le noeud du désaccord résidant principa- lement dans la répartition du risque financier pour les vil- les et comités organisateurs. Toujours selon le co-Président de la FGG “ceci constituait un noble effort afin de préparer un évenement unique, sportif et culturel, aux quatre ans. De nombreux points communs ont été identifiés pendant ces travaux et surtout les différences structurelles entre les deux organisations.”

Un autre point de désaccord selon le communiqué reçu à Gay Globe Magazine, qui avait été commanditaire officiel des Jeux Gais de 2006 à Chicago, résidait dans le fait que la FGG préfère que le droit de vote ne soit accordé qu’aux per- sonnes présentes aux réunions alors que la GLISA favorise un droit de vote à distance. Peu de temps après la réception du communiqué de la FGG, nous recevions un appel à sou- mettre une candidature pour les villes qui souhaiteraient organiser les jeux gais de 2018. Malheureusement, Mon- tréal aura encore une fois été responsable d’un schisme qui ne fait pas honneur à la communauté.

Gay Marriage May End in Divorce at The Supreme Court

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011

Thge Spiritual Herald

WASHINGTON–New York’s approval of same-sex marriage is just the first round in what will be a lengthy and fractious heavyweight legal battle that will wind up in the laps of the nine justices of the U.S. Supreme Court next year.

ACLU executive director Anthony D. Romero, who is gay himself, spelled out a robust list of lawsuits the organization has filed in states across the nation.

“We are in this for the long haul,” said Romero, “and we should have been taking the cases of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Americans long before now. But we are making up for it, and will not rest until all Americans are given equal treatment in marriage and every other respect no matter what their sexual orientation.”

Romero rattled off a rash of current lawsuits filed by the ACLU alleging that the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) violated the Constitution’s equal protection clause.

“No matter what happens at the state levels with these suits, we believe the entire issue will go to the U.S. Supreme Court next year,” said Romero. “Which is fine with us because we believe the Constitution is on our side.”

ACLU suits are active in California, Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York and many more are being prepared in a half-dozen more states, said Romero.

In addition to the legal wrangling, the emotional aspects of the hot-button issue are tearing apart liberal Protestant churches where some ministers are still quietly performing same-sex unions in defiance of church orders, putting their careers on the line.

Richard Harding, 85, a retired Methodist minister in Massachusetts, put it succinctly: “I have been performing gay marriages for years. It is a just thing to do.”

One church group that is split over the issue is the Methodists, where a growing number of pastors are saying they will defy the ban on marrying gays. Some ministers are even suggesting that the issue will cause a complete split into two denominations.

The Rev. Amy Del Long, 44, of Osceola, Wisc., who is a lesbian, said she willingly violates the church prohibition of marrying same-sex couples.

“I told my supervisors years ago that I was a lesbian and recently told them I would perform such weddings if asked,” she said. “It has not been easy, but I felt it was the right thing to do.” She faces charges that could lead to her suspension, but church elders would not discuss the matter.

Del Long is not alone in the Methodist ranks. Several hundred clergy members, active and retired, said they would perform gay marriages, according to unofficial surveys of clerics.

The progress that has been made by gays and lesbians on the legal front has not diminished the pain and suffering they go through to achieve their goal on the emotional front.

“It is a difficult road, but one we must travel to win our rights,” said Heather Mizeur, a Maryland state legislator who is openly gay. “We have been marching in the direction of legal marriages for some time now, and our goal is finally reachable.”

Mizeur, one of seven openly gay legislators in the Maryland House of Delegates, has been working to make the state the seventh to sign a gay marriage bill into law. Gov. Martin O’Malley said he would sign such a bill.

“Gay marriage is simply the human right to do what other married people take for granted, like granting protections to spouses for health insurance benefits and pensions as well as a host of other things, such as normal hospital visits if your partner gets sick,” Mizeur noted. “We are talking about humanity here.”

Lauren Long, a California divorcee who has been in a lesbian relationship for several years, spelled out the problem:

“When your partner is seriously ill, and a hospital official tells you that you cannot visit her because you are not a family member, it really hurts,” she said. “I know because it happened to me. Luckily someone on the hospital staff has some pity–and brains–and allowed me into the room of my partner.”

So these are the human events that often are overlooked as the same-sex union debate takes a legal turn.

But the denial of rights for gay partners does not hold water for many opponents of the unions.

A vehement argument against the unions is coming from formidable religions that have begun intense lobbying against gay marriage efforts– the Catholic, evangelical Baptist and Orthodox Jewish leaders who consider such a union a sin against God and the teachings of the Bible.

“Plain and simple, we don’t consider such unions as normal,” said a conservative Southern Baptist pastor. “Neither does the Bible.”

But a great many other denominations are coming to the defense of same-sex unions as a human right.

Such denominations as Methodists, Presbyterians and Episcopalians are being thrown into turmoil over the issue because more of them are beginning to support such unions, many quietly, however. Even the liberal clergy know that any support for same-sex unions puts their charities, hospitals and other social network institutions at risk.

Already, Catholic Charities has stopped participating in adoption services in Massachusetts and Washington, D.C, which approved same-sex unions, because they do not want children placed in homes of gay and lesbian couples.

There will be no give on either side, as the legal and spiritual apparatus is moving into high gear.

The states that currently allow marriages for gay and lesbian couples are New Hampshire, Connecticut, Vermont, Iowa, New York and Washington, D.C. And three states–Illinois, Hawaii and Delaware–created civil unions for same-sex couples this year.

One of the most important lawsuits on the issue is taking place in federal court in Nashville, Tenn., where a diverse coalition of the nation’s leading religions–Southern Baptists, Catholics, Mormons and Orthodox Jews–have filed a legal brief as friend of the court that says allowing homosexual marriages could adversely affect the children raised in such unions.

The brief states: “We have seen the enormous benefits that traditional male-female marriage imparts…and also have witnessed the substantial adverse consequences for children, parents and civil society that often flow from alternative household arrangement.”

The brief was filed after a landmark decision in Massachusetts struck down DOMA. “Striking down DOMA does not take the morality out of marriage debate,” the brief said.

The religious coalition is the largest group ever assembled on one issue. Besides the four faiths mentioned, the brief is also signed by the Evangelical Presbyterian Church, Open Bible Churches, the Conservative Congregational Christian Conference, the Evangelical Free Church of America, the Brethren in Christ Church, and the Christian Missionary Alliance.

While the legal efforts grow, so do the pro-active campaigns of the religions and their conservative supporters.

The Washington-based political lobby, the National Organization for Marriage, whose sole purpose is to fight same-sex marriage efforts, has begun a blitz of lobbying the federal and state governments, including e-mails, phone calls and personal visits to lawmakers and voters.

Brian Brown, the president, says his organization will “spend many millions of dollars to reject and defeat gay and lesbian marriage supporters and that includes anyone in Congress or in state legislatures. The issue is that important to America families.”

Legal scholars are certain that the nation’s highest court will ultimately decide all the lawsuits that are being filed in dozens of states over same-sex unions.

“It is inevitable that the Supreme Court holds the final key to unlocking the door that provides equal opportunity for gay, lesbian, bi-sexual and transgender Americans,” said Romero. “The New York legislature and governor provided us with a partial victory, but there is still a long road ahead.”

The same-sex issue touches the nerves of many Americans, including conservative religious leaders, top lawyers and civil rights scholars, political heavyweights on both sides of the aisle and–last but not least–the gay couples who seek equality under the law.

This transformation is what the problem is, say conservative religious and political leaders, who say the issue is dividing religions, putting impossible barriers into the process of marriage rights and doing something that the majority of Americans condemn.

Recognizing gay marriages is not going to happen in the Catholic Church, or the evangelical Baptist church or in conservative Jewish denominations—at least not in the foreseeable future, say religious scholars like Martin Marty, the respected professor of theology at the University of Chicago.

Marty is absolutely correct if you listen to Bishop Joseph Mattera, pastor of the Resurrection R.C. Church of Brooklyn, who is leading the lobbying against lesbian and gay unions.

“Marriage is between a man and a woman, period,” said Mattera, who is soliciting the help of the tea party members in Staten Island and other sections of New York.

Mattera heads the political advocacy group called Christ Covenant Coalition, and has assembled networks of hundreds of clergy of all faiths to combat the unions.

But more and more liberal pastors are accepting the new rules governing marriage, saying they are fair because many gay partners cannot participate in health care plans or wills or other legal benefits of marriage.

Hundreds of Methodist clergy from Illinois, Minnesota, New York and New England have signed statements in recent weeks asserting their willingness to marry gay couples in church. And many are today, even if they keep it quiet.

Those who do will be charged with violating denominational laws and are facing church trials. Penalties are defrocking or suspension from the ministry, but penalties are few and far between.

However, such unions are being performed all over the nation by legitimate clergy.

“We were married in an Episcopalian church in New York City by a priest,” said a gay lawyer who asked for anonymity, “and it was a beautiful ceremony attended by our families and friends. Just like a normal wedding, if you want to use that term. We don’t say ‘like’—we say it was a normal wedding.”

Such ceremonies are becoming common.

In Minnesota, the Rev. Bruce Robbins of the Hennepin Avenue United Methodist Church invited clergy to sign a statement saying they were willing to conduct any wedding, not just a heterosexual one. More than 70 pastors signed it, he said, along with hundreds of lay people who supported them.

“We have so many other tragedies in the world, like poverty and justice issues, that it is a shame we have to make this issue to be the center of the our efforts. It is an unfair law of the church, and we should reject it completely,” Robbins stated.

The chances of getting the Methodist Church to change its rules are remote. Rule changes must be approved by delegates at the church’s General Conference, held every four years. But because of a growing number of conservative Methodists from Africa, the Philippines and other regions, there would be great resistance to such a change.

54- Pension alimentaire pour un divorcé gai canadien

Saturday, December 18th, 2010

GATINEAU- Un gai qui doit bientôt divorcer a demandé et obtenu une pension alimentaire transitoire, le temps d’obtenir un jugement final de divorce lui accordant ce qu’il demande. C’est dans l’affaire no 550-12- 026877-075 que J.P., séparé depuis moins d’un an, souhai- tait obtenir de L.C. une pen- sion alimentaire afin de couvrir d’une part ses médicaments (les deux membres du couple sont VIH+) et aussi pour sub- venir à des besoins que le juge a considéré exagérés.
Dans la requête, le demandeur exigeait de son ex-mari 150$/ mois pour le téléphone, 140$/ m pour le câble, 100$/m pour le mobilier et la literie, 100$/m en frais de restaurants pour son travail et un autre 100$ de res- taurants pour ses loisirs, 1100$/ m de médicaments, 120$ pour des lunettes (il ne porte pas de lunettes), 150$/m de taxis et de transports en commun, 100$/m de frais d’éducation, 150$/m de loisirs, 80$/m d’abonnements à des publications, 50$/m pour son animal domestique (il n’a aucun animal domestique), et enfin 200$ /m pour ses cigaret- tes et son alcool.
Le Juge Martin Bédard, qui entendait la requête le 6 mars 2008 a considéré ces deman- des comme étant exagérées et non fondées, ne reconnais- sant au conjoint demandeur que la couverture de ses mé- dicaments par la compagnie d’assurance de son ex et 500$/ mois de soutien global.
Le demandeur avait déclaré des revenus de 19,000$/an alors que le conjoint avait déclaré 57,000$ par an. La loi sur le divorce reconnaît les conjoints de même sexe au Canada.

Divorce à cause de l’homosexualité

Saturday, November 14th, 2009

Une femme de Vancouver a obtenu le divorce, mardi, après avoir
démontré que son mari lʼavait trompée avec un autre homme, même si
la loi définit lʼadultère comme une relation extra-conjugale entre deux
personnes de sexe différent. La juge Nicole Garson, de la Cour suprême
de Colombie-Britannique, a déclaré avoir acquis la conviction quʼelle
avait le pouvoir de modifier la définition de lʼadultère.
La définition traditionnelle de lʼadultère est une relation sexuelle volon-
taire entre une personne mariée et une autre personne, du sexe opposé, à
laquelle elle nʼest pas mariée.
La juge Garson a également autorisé le ministère de la Justice à faire
appliquer une ordonnance de non-publication de lʼidentité du couple.
Christian Girouard, porte-parole du gouvernement fédéral, a indiqué que
le ministère détenait le statut dʼintervenant dans cette cause, afin de sʼas-
surer que la Loi sur le divorce serait interprétée de manière conforme à la
Charte des droits et libertés, en tenant compte de la législation sur le ma-
riage de conjoints de même sexe. «Dans cette cause, le tribunal était invité
à trancher la question de savoir si lʼadultère inclut également le comporte-
ment sexuel avec une personne de même sexe», a expliqué M. Girouard.
La décision de la juge pourrait avoir des répercussions à travers tout
le pays, étant donné quʼun nombre croissant de mariages de conjoints
de même sexe conduira inévitablement à des liaisons extra-conjugales
entre homosexuels ou lesbiennes, a affirmé barbara findlay, lʼavocate de
la femme, qui écrit son nom en minuscules.
Parce que lʼadultère nʼest pas défini dans la législation fédérale, les juges
dʼautres provinces qui seront appelés à entendre des causes similaires se-
ront sans doute influencés par le jugement Garson, a-t-elle dit. Se basant
sur la Charte des droits, Mme findlay conteste aussi la constitutionnalité
de la définition de lʼadultère, affirmant que celle-ci est discriminatoire à
lʼendroit des couples gais et lesbiens.
Elle a précisé que sa cliente était mariée depuis près de 17 ans. La femme
a demandé le divorce après avoir découvert que son mari entretenait
une liaison avec un homme. La juge Garson nʼétait pas certaine dʼavoir
juridiction pour accorder un tel divorce et a demandé à la femme dʼem-
baucher un avocat pour quʼil fasse valoir les raisons pour lesquelles la
définition dʼadultère devrait inclure les liaisons homosexuelles.
La juge devrait rendre publique sa décision écrite dʼici deux semaines.