No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveGay couples will appear in court Wednesday to legalize their relationships

Gay couples will appear in court Wednesday to legalize their relationships

Gay and lesbian couples announced they plan to appear in family court on Wednesday to apply for legal recognition of their relationships, according to Marco Castillo, president of the Diversity Movement.

The Tico Times confirmed three couples who said they would apply for common-law marriages this week. EFE news agency reported six.

“It’s a dream, a battle,” said Geovanny Delgado, vice president of the Diversity Movement and one of the couples applying for legal recognition on Wednesday.

Fiorella Bruno said that she and her partner, Ana Cristina Binda, were applying to establish same-sex rights to hospital visitation, partner benefits for public health insurance and inheritance rights for their son, Luca Vincenzo Binda.

“We’re doing this for him,” she said in a telephone interview.

According to Costa Rican law, couples must co-habitate for three years to be eligible for a common-law marriage.

All of the couples who spoke with The Tico Times sighted religious prejudice as one of the biggest hurdles facing their legal battle.

“Costa Rica needs to choose between religious fundamentalists and the international agreements it’s signed,” Delgado said, referring to a recent Organization of American States anti-discrimination agreement the country’s foreign minister signed. 

“Costa Rica sees itself as a vanguard of human rights but it’s not true,” he added.

Delgado’s comments preceded a recent interview in the daily La Nación with out-going archbishop of San José, Hugo Barrantes, in which the prelate referred to gay men as “unnatural” and accused minority groups of “imposing” themselves on the majority.

Castillo said that he sees common-law marriages as a “step forward” but not a replacement for marriage.

The Front for Equal Rights kicked off a national campaign for marriage equality on June 30 that collected over 2,000 signatures in support. 

Tico Times Poll:

Gay marriage in Costa Rica

Do you support same-sex marriage in Costa Rica?



Trending Now

Costa Rica’s Ojochal: From Farms to Luxury Tourism Hub

Ojochal, a small town in between the Pacific Ocean and the Fila Costeña in Costa Rica’s Osa, isn’t the sleepy agricultural community it once...

Costa Rica’s President Stirs Debate with Oil Exploration Stance

President Rodrigo Chaves has sparked controversy with his recent comments on oil exploration and the Escazú Agreement, defending his positions in an interview with...

Former Nicaraguan President Violeta Chamorro Dies in San José at 95

Violeta Barrios de Chamorro, Nicaragua’s first female president and a key figure in ending her country’s civil war, passed away peacefully this morning in...

Nicaragua Pulls Out of UN Refugee Agency, Citing Bias

Nicaragua announced that it is withdrawing from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), accusing the agency of making “biased” statements about Nicaraguans...

Costa Rica Faces Slower Growth and Rising Exchange Rate Pressures

Costa Rica is bracing for a challenging economic landscape through 2025 and into 2026, marked by slower growth, exchange rate pressures, and mounting uncertainties,...

Costa Rica’s Massive Drug Raid Targets Cocaine Network to Europe

Costa Rican authorities struck a major blow against international drug trafficking dismantling a criminal network that smuggled over five tons of cocaine to Europe....
Avatar
spot_img
Costa Rica Tours
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica