And then there was one: Of four same-sex marriages that have taken place in Argentina, only one remains with legal standing.
From Telam this afternoon:
The first marriage between women in Argentina, celebrated three days ago in the city of Buenos Aires between Norma Castillo and Ramona Areval - both 67 years old and having lived together for 30 years - was annulled today by a judge, in response to an injunction requested by an attorney, judicial sources said.The judge said that her judgment was based on the fact that the Buenos Aires Civil Registry specifically stated that marriages should be between a man and a woman and added that the decision "did not signify any advance opinion on the merits of the issue or discrimination against the stable co-living arrangements between people of the same gender."
The civil judge of the first court, Martha Gómez Alsina, declared the marriage "non-existent", until the underlying issue is resolved, in giving latitude for the claim presented by attorney Ricardo Ernesto Lamuedra.
This is the same attorney who last Monday was able to get civil court judge Federico Gustavo Irazabal to declare that the marriage between Damián Bernath and Jorge Salazar was non-existent.
Telam says that Lamuerda also had a role in keeping any Buenos Aires civil court from marrying Alex Freyre and José Maria Di Bello when they were seeking to become the first couple to marry in Argentina (they would later marry in Tierra del Fuego although their marriage was also annulled this week).
Freyre and Di Bello, Bernath and Salazar and now Castillo and Areval. All their marriages have been annulled in separate courts. The only one that remains is the one that took place yesterday in Buenos Aires between Carlos Alvarez and Martin Canavaro. Expect that marriage to be challenged as well even as a federal marriage equality bill gets closer to being debated in the Argentinian legislature.
Update (April 17, 2010): Sur 54 says that the LGBT Argentinian Federation (FALGBT) has announced they will appeal the Tierra del Fuego marriage annulment and seek to reinstate the validity and current standing of the Freyre and Di Bello marriage. They argue that the judge acted arbitrarily and outside his purview and that the Freyre-Di Bello marriage stands until a final judgment.
Previously:
- Marriage equality whiplash as good developments follow bad (April 15, 2010)
- Tierra del Fuego court annulls first Latin American same-sex marriage (April 14, 2010)
- And the first lesbians to marry are... (April 13, 2010)
- Marriage equality is a reality in Mexico City (March 14, 2010)
- Argentinian highest court ready to back same-sex marriages, says justice, with one caveat (February 16, 2010)
- Gay couple in Argentina granted marriage license, 1st in Latin America (December 29, 2009)
- Argentina: One year after pension benefits were granted to same-sex couples, only ten people have received them (August 27, 2009)
- Argentinian Attorney General files Supreme Court brief in support of same-sex marriages (August 9, 2009)
- Argentinian ban on gay soldiers lifted, effective today (February 27, 2009)
- Argentinian court allows transgender woman to legally change her name w/out requiring gender reassignment surgery (September 22, 2008)
- Argentinian President Kirchner to push for same-sex marriage? (February 25, 2008)
- Argentinian president-elect coy on LGBT issues, activists split on same-sex marriage strategy (November 1, 2007)