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| Sep 26, 2022

Cubans approve gay marriage by large margin in referendum

/ Our Today

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A voter walks out of a booth at a polling station during the new Family Code referendum in Havana, Cuba, September 25, 2022. (Photo: REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini)

HAVANA (Reuters)

Cubans approved gay marriage and adoption overwhelmingly in a Sunday referendum backed by the government that also boosted rights for women, the national election commission said on Monday (September 26).

More than 3.9 million voters voted to ratify the code (66.9 per cent), while 1.95 million opposed ratification (33 per cent), Alina Balseiro Gutiérrez, president of the commission, said on state-run television on Monday.

“Justice has been done,” Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel wrote in a tweet.

Cuba’s President Miguel Díaz-Canel casts his vote at a polling station during the new Family Code referendum in Havana, Cuba, September 25, 2022. (Photo: Courtesy of Estudios Revolucion/Handout via Reuters).

“It is paying off a debt with several generations of Cuban men and women, whose family projects have been waiting for this law for years,” he said.

The 100-page “family code” legalises same-sex marriage and civil unions, allows same-sex couples to adopt children, and promotes equal sharing of domestic rights and responsibilities between men and women.

Preliminary results from the electoral commission showed 74 per cent of 8.4 million Cubans eligible to vote participated in the Sunday referendum.

There are no independent observers of Cuban elections, although citizens may observe the count at their precincts. Scattered local reports of district counts on social media appeared to tally with the official results.

The announcement of the results came as Díaz-Canel presided over an emergency meeting as the Caribbean island prepared for Hurricane Ian to pass over its western tip early on Tuesday.

A billboard which reads “For the Cuban Families, your vote counts!” referring to a family code referendum to take place on September 25, is displayed in Havana, Cuba, September 19, 2022. (Photo: REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini)

Official Twitter accounts showed the room erupting in applause and the president leaning back and smiling at the news. The Cuban president led the campaign for the adoption of the code.

By Cuban standards, Sunday’s turnout was relatively modest, and a 33 per cent ‘no’ vote relatively large in the communist-run country, where previous referendums have seen the government position receiving near-unanimous approval.

The dissent is an indication of both how Cuba is changing and the current dire economic circumstances, which have seen long power outages and lines for food, medicine and fuel.

A voter casts his vote at a polling station during the new Family Code referendum in Havana, Cuba, September 25, 2022. (Photo: REUTERS/Alexandre Meneghini)

Sunday’s vote was also the first of its kind since mobile internet was legalised in 2018, which has let dissenting views spread more widely.

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