Court throws out China’s first ever gay marriage case

A judge hearing China’s first ever gay marriage case took just a few hours to reject the plaintiffs’ bid to have their union recognised on Wednesday.

The court in the city of Changsha threw out a suit filed by Sun Wenlin and Hu Mingliang against a local civil affairs bureau which had refused to issue them a marriage registration certificate. They argued that they should be allowed to marry as Chinese law does not explicitly ban same-sex marriage.

The fact that a district court agreed to hear the case at all as a first in China and there were cheers for the couple when they entered the court, reported the BBC.

Around 300 people turned up to show support and about 100 were allowed inside the courtroom as the case began on Wednesday morning.

At lunchtime, the judge announced he was dismissing the case. Sun, 27, said he thought the decision had been made too quickly and the court had been “too cautious”.

“We will continue to appeal,” he said. “I think it is worthwhile. It catches people’s attention and it will help our opinions spread,” Sun said. “What we are trying to achieve is freedom and equality.”

The case has been widely discussed on social media and despite the result has been seen as a step forward for LGBT rights in China, where there is widespread discrimination.

Homosexuality was decriminalised in 1997 and removed from the official list of mental disorders in 2001 but laws and regulations continue to define it as “abnormal,” according to LGBT organisation, Outright International. Being transgender is still classed as a mental disorder.

Some psychiatrists still use electric shock therapy to try to “cure” gay patients, LGBT people suffer police harassment and arbitrary detention, and there are no anti-discrimination laws.