Same-sex partnership registration system needed in Hong Kong: authorities



Hong Kong authorities have defended the need to set up an official registration system for same-sex partnerships, saying that record-keeping alone is insufficient to allow the government to verify marriages overseas.

The bill, so far opposed by at least 41 members of the 89-strong Legislative Council, went through its first clause-by-clause examination by the bills committee on Friday morning, when the government rebutted lawmaker Erik Yim Kongโ€™s suggestion to set up a record-keeping system instead.

Yim said that a record-keeping arrangement would help minimise the โ€œsocial impactโ€ and expenditures, and that the governmentโ€™s plan to set up a registration office and a registrar might โ€œperceptually bring same-sex partnerships to the same level as marriageโ€.

โ€œAfter completing registration, the same-sex couples might hold bouquets and even wear wedding gowns [at the office], taking pictures and sharing them on social media. This may give society a sense of de facto marriage.โ€

Yim further proposed that the government could just issue acknowledgements of record-keeping, instead of registration certificates, and send them to applicants by post or even electronically.

โ€œIn doing so, it mitigates the social impacts and saves the governmentโ€™s expenditures.โ€

But Solicitor General Llewellyn Mui Kei-fat said that record-keeping alone would not enable authorities to verify whether the applications met the criteria stipulated by the bill.

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