On 7 November 2013, the European Court of Human Rights
(Court hereinafter) handed down its much-awaited decision in Vallianatos and Others
v Greece (applications nos. 29381/09 and 32684/09), and delivered the first
major win for gay rights in Greece. In an
exemplary ruling, the Court held Greece to be in violation of Article 14
(prohibition of discrimination) of the European Convention of Human Rights
(Convention hereinafter) taken in conjunction with Article 8 (respect for one’s
private and family life). The applicants had complained against the exclusion
of same-sex couples from the scope of Law no.
3719/2008, which extended only to different-sex couples the right to enter into
a civil union.
Background to the enactment of the Law on Civil Unions
The impugned Law, entitled “Reforms concerning the
family, children and society”, entered into force on 26 November 2008 and
introduced into the Greek legal order the institution of civil union (σύμφωνο συμβίωσης) as a form of partnership alternative to marriage.
Section 1 of the Law, headed “Conclusion of a civil union”, provides that
such unions can be entered into only by two adults of different sex, and, thus,
excludes same-sex couples from its scope.
A 2004 Report by
the National Commission for Human Rights, inviting the Minister of Justice to
inquire into the legal recognition of same-sex partnerships, and the expressed
intention of the Government in 2006 to introduce relevant legislation, had
raised the hopes for gay men and women in Greece. Those expectations were
quashed in 2008 when the new Government introduced a Bill that extended the
right to enter into a civil union only to different-sex couples. A heated
debate, both inside and outside the Parliament, preceded the implementation of
the Law.
In a press release, the Holy Synod, the ruling body of
the Church of Greece, described civil unions as “prostitution” and expressed
its “hope and wish that the Bill in question will not pass into Law” (http://tinyurl.com/oprkrpx, in Greek). As expected, the
discussion in the Parliament revolved largely around the exclusion of same-sex
couples from the Bill. Understanding that the Court would find the Law
incompatible with the Convention, the far-right party suggested to have the
Bill altogether withdrawn instead of running the risk of a Court-mandated
amendment in Strasbourg. Responding primarily to the former objections, the
Minister of Justice answered that: “Same-sex couples should not be included …
that the demands and requirements of Greek society do not justify going beyond
this point.” (see: http://tinyurl.com/p34cz9d for the travaux préparatoires, in Greek). Addressing the latter
objections, he clarified that he is not in the position to know whether this
Law would end up before the Court and that, should this happen, Greece would
execute the decision, whatever its content.
As it had been
anticipated, in May 2009, four same-sex couples, residents in Athens, as well
as an association (whose standing was denied), lodged an application against
Law no. 3719/2008 relying on Article 8 of the Convention taken in conjunction
with Article 14.
Institutionalized homophobia in Greece
Amongst else, the applicants faulted the Government
for reinforcing homophobia in the Greek society by excluding same-sex couples
from the scope of the law. As regards the rampant homophobia in Greece, a very
brief digression is in order. A great many politicos, from nearly all political
parties, and bishops, have repeatedly employed hateful language when addressing
the issue of homosexuality. To tragicomic effect, the National Radio and
Television Council, in 2003, called the exchange of a kiss on the mouth between
two men as “vulgar and unacceptable” and fined a TV station with 100.000 euros
for broadcasting that depiction (http://tinyurl.com/q8agudd). Although the fine was
lifted upon appeal to the Greek Council of State (the Supreme Administrative
Court), the effects of that fine have been both lasting and pernicious, and
have led to many incidents of self-censorship by TV stations, in a bid to avoid
further fines. Always within the realm of the absurd, another example, from
numerous such incidents, is the removal of a gay kiss from the broadcast of the
British drama Downton Abbey by the (now defunct) publicly owned “New Greek
Television” (http://tinyurl.com/cb44gkz).
The Greek courts have had their masterstrokes of homophobia; most notoriously, the Court of Cassation (981/2006), while annulling a will, referred to the decedent’s homosexuality as a “disorder that aggravated to the point of pathology”, and did not shy away from presenting gratuitous details of his personal life, such as the fact that the decedent “had displayed, since his childhood, tendencies of passive homosexuality [sic] and engaged in casual erotic same-sex relationships”. In its despicable Judgment 676/2009, the Court of Cassation found that the dismissal of an HIV-positive employee (incidentally homosexual, as reported in the press) was fully justified by the interests of the employer, insofar as the termination aimed to restore the calm in the business as “disrupted by the extremely serious and contagious disease”. Apart from being a monument to hate and ignorance, this judgment, effectively, “normalises” the animus towards HIV-infected patients, while perpetuating the stereotypes shared by a big percentage in the Greek society about AIDS being a “gay disease”. Naturally, the European Court of Human Rights in I.B. v. Greece (application no. 552/10) chastised the Court of Cassation (and, in turn, Greece) for the above decision.
The Greek courts have had their masterstrokes of homophobia; most notoriously, the Court of Cassation (981/2006), while annulling a will, referred to the decedent’s homosexuality as a “disorder that aggravated to the point of pathology”, and did not shy away from presenting gratuitous details of his personal life, such as the fact that the decedent “had displayed, since his childhood, tendencies of passive homosexuality [sic] and engaged in casual erotic same-sex relationships”. In its despicable Judgment 676/2009, the Court of Cassation found that the dismissal of an HIV-positive employee (incidentally homosexual, as reported in the press) was fully justified by the interests of the employer, insofar as the termination aimed to restore the calm in the business as “disrupted by the extremely serious and contagious disease”. Apart from being a monument to hate and ignorance, this judgment, effectively, “normalises” the animus towards HIV-infected patients, while perpetuating the stereotypes shared by a big percentage in the Greek society about AIDS being a “gay disease”. Naturally, the European Court of Human Rights in I.B. v. Greece (application no. 552/10) chastised the Court of Cassation (and, in turn, Greece) for the above decision.
Laws on civil unions before the Court
Before delving into the merits of the case in Vallianatos, the Court reiterated its previous-case law
and principles on gay rights. In line with the position taken already in Schalk and Kopf v. Austria, where the
Court first acknowledged that the relationship of a cohabiting same-sex couple
living in a stable de facto relationship fell within the protective
scope of “family life” (and not under the more flexible notion of “private
life”) under Article 8, the Court reasserted in Vallianatos that
“it [would be] artificial to maintain the view that, in contrast to a
different-sex couple, a same-sex couple [could not] enjoy ‘family life’ for the
purposes of Article 8”. Reiterating then its well-established interpretation of
discriminatory treatment, the Court affirmed that a difference in treatment is
discriminatory when it has no objective and reasonable justification; the
burden of proof lies with the Government to demonstrate that any difference in
treatment pursues a legitimate aim and that there is a reasonable relationship
of proportionality between the means employed and the aim pursued. The margin
of appreciation that States enjoy in this respect is particularly narrow when
the difference in treatment is based on sexual orientation for which
“particularly convincing and weighty reasons” are required by way of
justification. (see also Salgueiro da Silva
Mouta, § 36; and X and Others v.
Austria, § 99).
The Court
proceeded to carefully dissect the two arguments that the Government employed
to justify its choice not to bring same-sex relationships within the
scope of Law no. 3719/2008. According to the first line of argumentation,
same-sex persons in Greece could still gain access through private law tools to
the rights provided under the institution of civil union. The Court rejected
that argument, on the grounds that “the civil partnerships provided for
by Law no. 3719/2008 as an officially recognised alternative to marriage have
an intrinsic value for the applicants irrespective of the legal effects, however
narrow or extensive, that they would produce”. Echoing the oral arguments of
the applicants, the Court acknowledged the symbolic value that the legal
recognition of a relationship holds for the partners and the rest of the
society. To borrow the phrasing used by the applicants’ counselor, same-sex
partners in Greece “are in a legal no man’s land on grounds of their sexual
orientation only; they have lost the symbolic right to be seen as a
fully-fledged citizen, they are second-class citizens”. Indeed, same-sex partners
in Greece are not legally empowered to present themselves as a couple in the
eyes of the administration; they face insurmountable obstacles in what regards
the management of their shared estate; they have to ground their inheritance
rights in a valid will and, even then, a significant portion of one’s estate
will by law be reserved for the surviving relatives, in contrast to the
inheritance rights of different-sex partners; they are not entitled to social
welfare benefits and tax cuts, which in contrast are readily available to
opposite-sex partners in marriage or civil union.
The second set
of arguments raised by the Government, concerned the best interests of children
born out of wedlock. According to the Government, “Law no. 3719/2008 is
designed to strengthen the legal status of children born outside marriage and
to make it easier for parents to raise their children without being obliged to
marry”. The biological inability of same-sex partners to bear children together
is, in the Government’s mind, the objective justification behind their
exclusion from civil union. The Court accepted that the protection of the
family in the traditional sense and the best interests of the child are
legitimate aims from the standpoint of Article 8 ECHR, including the intent “to
regulate the situation of children born outside marriage and also indirectly
strengthen the institution of marriage within Greek society”.
The Court then proceeded to examine whether the Government had abided by the principle of proportionality while pursuing the above-stated aims. The Court held that, first, there was a broad range of measures capable of protecting the family in the traditional sense; second, given that the Convention is a living instrument which should be interpreted in present-day conditions, any State, regulating family affairs, ought to take into account societal developments, “including the fact that there is not just one way or one choice when it comes to leading one’s family or private life”. The Court concluded that this Law was designed first and foremost with the idea of providing a legal alternative to the traditional institution of marriage, and was not confined to the protection of children born outside of marriage. To this end, the Court raised the point that the Law allowed different-sex couples without children to enter into a civil union, without extending the same right to childless same-sex couples. Of equal importance was the fact that various sections of the Law regulate the living arrangements between the different-sex partners in a civil union, such as their financial relations and the maintenance obligations as well as the right to inherit, independently of the existence or not of a child. The Court also held that the Government had failed to demonstrate how the interests of children born outside marriage would have been compromised, had same-sex couples been brought within the scope of the law.
The Court then proceeded to examine whether the Government had abided by the principle of proportionality while pursuing the above-stated aims. The Court held that, first, there was a broad range of measures capable of protecting the family in the traditional sense; second, given that the Convention is a living instrument which should be interpreted in present-day conditions, any State, regulating family affairs, ought to take into account societal developments, “including the fact that there is not just one way or one choice when it comes to leading one’s family or private life”. The Court concluded that this Law was designed first and foremost with the idea of providing a legal alternative to the traditional institution of marriage, and was not confined to the protection of children born outside of marriage. To this end, the Court raised the point that the Law allowed different-sex couples without children to enter into a civil union, without extending the same right to childless same-sex couples. Of equal importance was the fact that various sections of the Law regulate the living arrangements between the different-sex partners in a civil union, such as their financial relations and the maintenance obligations as well as the right to inherit, independently of the existence or not of a child. The Court also held that the Government had failed to demonstrate how the interests of children born outside marriage would have been compromised, had same-sex couples been brought within the scope of the law.
Political developments following the Court’s decision
At the time of writing, there has been neither much
coverage in the mainstream Greek press on the ramifications of the Court’s
final ruling nor any official statement by the Government. On 20
November, the political party “Democratic Left” (Δημοκρατική Αριστερά), former member of the present Greek (coalition)
Government, submitted an Amendment that would bring in line the Law no.
3719/2008 with the Court’s findings; essentially, the submitted Amendment
proposes the omission of the words “different sex” from Section 1 of the Law,
leaving otherwise the Law as it stands (http://tinyurl.com/owddvr8, in Greek). It remains to be
seen when and how and whether the present Government will remedy the existing
discrimination. In response to the mounting pressure on the Government to duly
and immediately execute the Court’s decision, a high-profile member of the Holy
Synod pledged to excommunicate those parliamentarians that would vote for
same-sex civil unions (http://tinyurl.com/od3ny2z).
It is regrettable that back then the Greek government opted, in full knowledge, to adopt a clearly discriminatory law instead of shouldering the political costs of extending rights to gay people; five years later, it is high time that the Greek legislature repaired, without any delay, the injustice done to an already discriminated segment of its population-
It is regrettable that back then the Greek government opted, in full knowledge, to adopt a clearly discriminatory law instead of shouldering the political costs of extending rights to gay people; five years later, it is high time that the Greek legislature repaired, without any delay, the injustice done to an already discriminated segment of its population-
Conclusion
Concluding on a
more lyrical note, in the queer film Victor/Victoria, there is a soft-shoe
number called “You and Me”, where a gay male couple, performed by Julie Andrews
and Robert Preston, sings “we don’t care that tomorrow comes with no guarantee,
we’ve each other for company”. However moving and sentimental this lyric in its
depiction of dignified suffering, however poignantly it resonates with the
experiences of numerous same-sex couples in Greece, it is high time that these
citizens also obtained the rights and guarantees that their different-sex
counterparts rightfully enjoy.
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