First gay couple wed in France amid tight security
Vincent Austin (l), a 40-year-old gay rights activist, met his 30-year-old partner Bruno Boileau in 2006
Two
men have become the first gay couple to wed in France, just days after
President Francois Hollande signed the same-sex marriage bill into law.
Vincent Austin and Bruno Boileau tied the knot in the southern city of Montpellier amid tight security.Mr Hollande had warned he would not accept any disruption to the ceremony.
The new legislation has proved controversial and sparked violent protests.
150 media crews were accredited for the ceremony
The anti-gay marriage lobby, backed by the Catholic Church and
conservative opposition, argues the bill undermines an essential
building block of society. Extra security The Socialist mayor of Montpellier conducted the ceremony and said that marriage was about "the same rights for everybody".
Mr Austin, a 40-year-old gay rights activist, met his 30-year-old partner in 2006.
Some 600 guests were invited and 150 media crews were accredited for the ceremony, the BBC's Christian Fraser, in Paris, reports.
Extra police were drafted in, with fear that the extreme-right might also attend, our correspondent added.
On Sunday, at least 150,000 demonstrators took to the streets of Paris to denounce the same-sex marriage bill, which was signed into law on 18 May.
Earlier, the Constitutional Council ruled that same-sex marriage "did not run contrary to any constitutional principles," and that it did not infringe on "basic rights or liberties or national sovereignty".
Timeline: Gay marriage in France
- May 2012: Election of President Hollande, who makes gay marriage his flagship social reform
- January 2013: At least 340,000 join protests in Paris as National Assembly begins debate on gay marriage bill
- April: Senate approves bill, two months after the assembly had passed it
- 17 May: Constitutional Court dismisses legal challenge
- 18 May: Bill signed into law by President Hollande
Some officials said they had a conscientious objection to carrying out gay wedding ceremonies.
"I will find a balance between freedom of conscience and
breaking the law," said Philippe Brillaut, the Mayor of Le Chesnau in
western Paris. "We will retain our freedom while respecting the law - and that is in no way homophobic. And I will delegate any marriage to a socialist councillor who has agreed to conduct them."
But it is not clear what will happen if, in smaller communes, all officials are against gay marriage and refuse to take part, correspondents say.
Mr Hollande and his governing Socialist Party have made the legislation their flagship social reform since being elected a year ago.
Opinion polls have suggested that about 55-60% of French people support gay marriage, but only about 50% approve of gay adoption.
France is now the 14th country to legalise gay marriage after New Zealand last month.
It is also the ninth country in Europe to allow same-sex marriage after legalisation in the traditionally liberal Netherlands and Scandinavia, but also in strongly Catholic Portugal and Spain. Legislation is also moving through the UK Parliament.
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