YEREVAN -- Armenia's parliament has rejected consideration of a bill seeking to expressly outlaw same-sex marriages in the Caucasus nation. A majority of lawmakers on November 12 dismissed consideration of a draft law proposed by the opposition Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), saying it was redundant given that the country's constitution already defines marriage as a union between "a woman and a man."
The bill's co-author, lawmaker Gevork Petrosian, who in the past has expressed anti-LGBT sentiments, demanded that lawmakers "simply put into the Family Code a provision expressly banning same-sex and transgender marriages."
Lawmakers also rejected a proposal by Petrosian to add a provision in the Family Code banning adoption by homosexuals. Members of the ruling My Step alliance said that Armenia's current legislation regulates all the issues raised by the opposition lawmaker and that there is no need for any additional statements.
"Don't try to be more Catholic than the pope," My Step's Alen Simonian said, suggesting the BHK was using the issue to "create a scandal." The gay-marriage debate in the Armenian parliament comes amid concerns expressed by conservative groups in Armenia about a possible ratification of a Council of Europe convention that they claim will pave the way for same-sex marriages.
The treaty signed in 2011 and known as the Istanbul Convention commits council member states to combat violence against women. While saying they support the protection of women, opponents object to the Istanbul Convention's definition of gender as "social roles, behaviors, activities, and characteristics that a particular society considers appropriate for women and men." They claim this paves the way for introducing transsexual or transgender as separate categories and legalizing gay marriages. Read more via RFERL