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The state's GDP was 210,041,025 million of pesos in 2008, amount corresponding to 16,409,455.078 millon of dollars, being a dollar worth 12.80 pesos (value of June 3, 2010). Then-health minister Leo Varadkar also revealed he was gay during the campaign. "We had friends coming home from London and Australia to vote who had never voted before," he told the Irish Independent. the day gay marriage was legalized, though they had already been joined by a civil union one month earlier.Ī two-thirds majority had voted in favour of gay marriage in a referendum in May that year after a campaign Gollogly described to the Independent as "really well-run". The couple first met in The George pub in Dublin, with Gollogly telling the Irish Independent in November 2015: "Our eyes met across the room and a friend who was with me asked what guy I was interested in, and I pointed at Richard and he caught me."Īccording to the paper, they "raced" to be the first to be married at the County Tipperary registry office at 8:30 a.m. Macri later became president from 2015 to 2019.ĭowlin and Gollogly, both 35, smiled after being married in the South Clonmel Community Care Centre in County Tipperary, Ireland, in October 2015. According to The Observer, posters of the two men kissing appeared across Buenos Aires, saying: "Did you vote Macri for this?"īut in July 2010 President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner officially signed equal gay marriage rights into law. The debate also had political consequences for Buenos Aires' mayor, Mauricio Macri. "We may have won our battle, but we don't want to be the exception," Freyre told The Observer.īut their plan to marry had divided the country, with debates raging on TV, in churches, and posters plastered onto billboards, The Observer reported. They decided to marry on December 28, which was also World AIDS Day, Hispanic Business said.
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Only in December did the governor of Ushuaia give them permission to marry. Jose Maria Di Bello and his partner Alex Freyre kiss as they get married at a government's registry office in Ushuaiaĭi Bello and Freyre signed their wedding papers in Ushuaia, Argentina, in December 2009 after a legal wrangle between local and national courts over whether they could marry.Ī judge in Buenos Aires gave them permission to marry on November 20, but that decision was overturned by a national judge on November 23, which was again overturned by the same Buenos Aires judge on November 24 - causing a lot of confusion, Hispanic Business reported. "When we attained our democracy, we sought to distinguish ourselves from an unjust painful past, by declaring that never again shall it be that any South African will be discriminated against on the basis of color, creed culture and sex," she said, according to the Associated Press. Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula, the country's home affairs minister, likened the law to liberation from apartheid in a speech to the National Assembly. They were the first biracial gay couple to exchange vows in the country, according to Reuters.Įleven years later, in November 2006, South Africa became the first African country to pass a law allowing gay couples to marry. Neil Millard, left, and Venash Mooriken took their vows in a ceremony in South Africa on December 29 1995, long before the country had legalized gay marriage. Both men were diagnosed with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, in the late 1980s Venash Mooriken (R) and Neil Millard kiss after taking their vows in the first cross-racial gay marriage of two HIV-positive men in South Africa December 29. "We are so ordinary, if you saw us on the street you'd just walk right past us," she said, according to the BBC. Despite the attention, Thus emphasized the normalcy of her relationship with Faasen. The four couples were married in front of hundreds of journalists by Amsterdam's mayor. The magazine had called for the first same-sex Amsterdammers who wanted to be married the moment the new law took effect, according to Het Parool. The four couples had responded to an advert in Gay Krant, a magazine that had led the campaign for equal marriage, according to the BBC.
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Peter Lemke, Frank Wittebrood, Ton Jansen, Louis Rogmans, Helene Faasen, Anne-Marie Thus, Dolf Pasker and Geert Kasteel (L-R) cut the cake after their wedding ceremony in the town hall of Amsterdam, April 1, 2001.Ĭutting the cake and making history in the very same moment are, from left to right: Peter Lemke, Frank Wittebrood, Ton Jansen, Louis Rogmans, Helene Faasen, Anne-Marie Thus, Dolf Pasker and Geert Kasteel.