Small European States Play Catch Up to Equality for LGBT
A rainbow flag is displayed from a window at Vogay, an association for the sexual and gender diversity, in Lausanne, Switzerland, in June 2020. When Switzerland became one of the last Western European nations to legalize same-sex marriage last year, it made waves next door in the tiny Alpine country of Liechtenstein. | REUTERS |
BY ENRIQUE ANARTE
THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION
When Switzerland became one of the last Western European nations to legalize same-sex marriage in 2021, it made waves next door in the tiny Alpine country of Liechtenstein.
Two days after the Swiss vote, lawmakers signaled near-unanimous support for same-sex marriage during a parliamentary session in the principality, one of several European microstates that trail their neighbors on LGBT equality laws.
This year, the nation of fewer than 40,000 people is also due to host its first Pride event.
“I guess it’s always been like this; we’ve always waited for bigger countries to take the initiative,” said Stefan Marxer, a board member at Liechtenstein’s only LGBT group, Flay.
Catholicism is the official religion in the principality, which advocacy group ILGA-Europe rates 40th of 49 observed European countries when it comes to legal protections for LGBT people, just behind Romania and Ukraine.
Only Malta scores highly among Europe’s microstates on LGBT rights legislation — clinching the top spot in the ILGA rating.
Under Liechtenstein’s current laws, same-sex couples can access civil unions granting them some economic and social benefits, but cannot adopt, and there is no specific legislation for transgender people to change their legal name and gender.
Liechtenstein’s monarch, Prince Hans-Adam II — who can veto any new legislation passed by parliament — has opposed extending marriage rights to LGBT couples if that meant they were granted the same rights to adopt children as heterosexual couples.
“If two homosexuals adopt some boys, that’s not unproblematic,” he said in a radio interview last February, adding that children have a right to grow up in a “normal family”.
Liechtenstein’s government declined to comment.
Despite the prince’s remarks, Marxer said pressure for change was mounting.
‘Winds of change’
The governments of Andorra, Monaco and San Marino also declined to comment.
In Andorra, a microstate sandwiched between France and Spain in the Pyrenees, the Catholic Church has sought to put limits on pro-LGBT reform, campaigners said.
Andorra, which is headed by two co-princes — the French president and the Roman Catholic bishop of Urgell, in the Spanish region of Catalonia — passed a far-reaching gay civil unions law in 2014 but stopped short of using the term marriage.
“The only reason why it isn’t called gay marriage is because the bishopric (the bishop of Urgell) won’t accept it,” said Loan Poulet, a 33-year-old Andorran educator and writer who has written a book for children covering trans issues.
He said large numbers of immigrants to the country had helped change attitudes, and — due partly to the broad civil partnerships law — Andorra is ranked 26th by ILGA-Europe.
Still, LGBT rights advocates said the political establishment showed little urgency for deeper reform.
“Andorran institutions are reluctant to acknowledge that our bigger neighbors have an influence on us, because it’s a small country that wants to keep its own identity,” said Rocio Soler, president of Andorra’s only LGBT group, DiversAnd.
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