Cuba: end of the ballot for the referendum on gay marriage

by time news


LCubans voted in a referendum on Sunday on a new Family Code, which notably includes same-sex marriage and surrogacy, a text widely supported by the government.

Most polling stations across the country closed at 6 p.m. local time (2200 GMT). Some closed an hour later, in Havana and some provinces, due to bad weather.

According to the National Electoral Council (CEN), turnout at 4:00 p.m. was 54.82%. Turnout at the close of polling was not immediately known.

According to the electoral authority, the results should be announced on Monday. The text will enter into force immediately if it obtains more than 50% of the votes.

Some 8.4 million Cubans were asked to answer yes or no to the question: “Do you agree with the Family Code?”.

“It’s a rather quiet Sunday. If we compare it to other polls, it’s different, we don’t see any enthusiasm”, noted in the afternoon Eduardo, a 57-year-old voter who does not did not wish to give his name.

The 2019 Constitution, also subject to a referendum, was approved by nearly 87% of voters, for a turnout of 90.15%.

The new Family Code defines marriage as the union of “two people”, legalizing same-sex marriage, and authorizing same-sex adoption.

It strengthens the rights of children, the elderly and the disabled, and introduces the possibility of legally recognizing several fathers and mothers, in addition to the biological parents, as well as non-profit surrogacy.

Several of these subjects remain sensitive in Cuba, in a society still steeped in machismo and whose communist government ostracized homosexuals in the 1960s and 1970s.

Nevertheless, over the past twenty years, the attitude of the authorities towards homosexuals has changed markedly, and the “yes” vote has been the subject of an intense government campaign, on television and on social networks.

The Family Code “is a fair, necessary, updated and modern law that gives rights and guarantees to everyone,” insisted President Miguel Diaz-Canel after voting in a neighborhood in western Havana.

“Vote sanction”

“Perhaps a few years ago I would not have accepted this code, but you have to understand that societies evolve (…) It is a very human code, totally inclusive”, recognized Elio Gomez , a 78-year-old ex-professor of Marxism.

This is the first time that Cubans have been called upon to vote yes or no on a law, the referendum having hitherto been reserved for constitutional texts.

The election comes as the country of 11.2 million people is going through a deep economic crisis and is facing a record wave of emigration. More than a year ago, in July 2021, historic protests to cries of “We are hungry” and “Freedom” rocked the island.

The Head of State himself recognized “that for such complex questions, where there is a diversity of” personal criteria, and in a difficult economic context, “people can have a sanction vote”.

“There is no food, no hygiene products. We are surviving amid power cuts. I see no reason to say ‘yes’,” José Antonio Callejas, 47, told AFP. leaving a polling station in the capital.

In addition to the rejection of the Catholic bishops, the broad nature of the text may have fueled the negative vote or abstention, some voters saying, for example, in favor of marriage for all, but opposed to adoption.

For political scientist Rafael Hernandez, it is the “most important human rights legislation” in Cuba since the 1959 revolution, to the point that some have considered that the government “was going too far”.

This progressive character of the text also divided the opponents.

“We are not voting yes with the CCP, it is he who is voting yes with us,” gay activist Maykel Gonzalez Vivero had insisted on Twitter a few weeks before the election, in reference to the Cuban Communist Party, a single party.

On Sunday, he posted a photo of his ballot in favor of the text.

Other activists and dissidents had called for voting against or abstaining.

09/26/2022 01:54:31 – Havana (AFP) – © 2022 AFP

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