Same-sex marriage in Nunavut

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gay rights in Canada
Civil Marriage Act · Re Same-Sex Marriage
38th House · 38th Senate
39th House · 39th Senate
Same-sex marriage in Canada
Alberta · British Columbia · Manitoba
New Brunswick · Newfoundland and Labrador
Northwest Territories · Nova Scotia · Nunavut
Ontario · Prince Edward Island · Quebec
Saskatchewan · Yukon
Civil unions in Quebec

Nunavut Territory began granting marriage licences to same-sex couples upon the passage of the federal Civil Marriage Act on July 20, 2005.

On 30 October 2003, Premier Paul Okalik made the following statement:

"If developments in the Parliament of Canada and the Supreme Court of Canada result in the definition of marriage being broadened, we will respect the law and comply with that. In the meantime, anyone in Nunavut who has been legally married anywhere will be recognized by the Government of Nunavut as married."

He further suggested that the territory would perform same-sex divorces should the issue arise.

In general, the Inuit culture dominant in Nunavut does not presently approve of homosexuality or same-sex partnerships, seeing homosexuality as an artifact of qaallunaat (white) culture and thus foreign to the Inuit. Comments to the House of Commons Justice Committee's travelling hearings studying same-sex marriage were almost uniformly negative during the committee's audience in the capital Iqaluit. However, Premier Okalik has succeeded in passing a territorial human rights code banning discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. As well, Nancy Karetak-Lindell, Liberal MP for the riding of Nunavut, was re-elected in the 2006 election after having supported same-sex marriage.

During the March, 2004 general election in Nunavut, one of Premier Okalik's main opponents ran on the basis that he would repeal the territory's human rights legislation on sexual orientation, and would not recognize same-sex marriages.

[edit] External links