Brutal Killing

  • Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Reuters Showcase

Quality or Quantity

Quality or Quantity

In China, food scares put Mao's self-sufficiency goal at risk.  Full Article 

Comfort Women

Comfort Women

Japan's wartime brothels were wrong, says 91-year-old veteran.  Full Article | Video 

Oklahoma Tornado

Oklahoma Tornado

Oklahoma tornado victims astounded at how they survived  Full Article | Slideshow 

Syrian Crisis

Syrian Crisis

West may boost Syria rebels if Assad won't talk peace.  Full Article 

U.S. Drone Strikes

U.S. Drone Strikes

U.S. acknowledges killing four Americans in drone strikes.  Full Article 

Stockholm Riots

Stockholm Riots

Stockholm riots challenge image of happy, generous state.  Full Article 

Marathon Bombings

Marathon Bombings

FBI says man shot dead while being questioned about Boston bombings.  Full Article 

China-U.S. Ties

China-U.S. Ties

Analysis: From opera to exercises, U.S. and China deepen military ties.  Full Article 

Reuters India Mobile

Reuters India Mobile

Get the latest news on the go. Visit Reuters India on your mobile device.  Full Coverage 

Protests in French cities against plans to legalise gay marriage

Related Topics

A protestor holds a placard during a demonstration against a draft law to allow same-sex marriage in Paris November 17, 2012. REUTERS/Christian Hartmann

A protestor holds a placard during a demonstration against a draft law to allow same-sex marriage in Paris November 17, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Christian Hartmann

Sun Nov 18, 2012 10:00am IST

PARIS (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of people, joined by Catholic church leaders, marched in cities across France on Saturday to protest against government plans to legalise same-sex marriage.

Demonstrators, holding banners with slogans such as "don't touch civil marriage", "all born from the union of a man and a woman" and "one father + one mother for all children", took to the streets in Paris, Lyon, Marseille and other major towns.

The organisation behind the protests, called "Demos for All" in imitation of the "marriage for all" call of gay-marriage campaigners, claims the Socialist government's reforms, which polls indicate have popular support, would threaten "major and dangerous upheaval".

The organisers said 200,000 people demonstrated in the French capital, compared with a police estimate of 70,000.

France's National Assembly is due to start examining the proposed law allowing same-sex marriage in January, with a vote expected in mid-2013. It would grant gay couples the right to adopt children but not to use assisted procreation methods.

Recent polls show the majority of French people support gay marriage, though not the right for homosexual couples to adopt.

France's top Catholic prelate, Paris Cardinal Andre Vingt-Trois, earlier this month criticised the government for forging ahead with the plans at a time when the country faced urgent economic concerns.

Pope Benedict told French bishops visiting the Vatican on Saturday not to be "afraid" of spreading Christian teachings.

"In the important debates about society, the voice of the church must make itself heard relentlessly and with determination," he said.

The Vatican pledged this month never to stop fighting attempts to "erase" the privileged role of heterosexual marriage, which it called "an achievement of civilisation".

Jean-Francois Cope, who is hoping to become leader of the opposition centre-right UMP party in an internal contest with ex-Prime Minister Francois Fillon on Sunday, sent a letter of support to the protesters.

While he said he would not join them, other elected UMP representatives and mayors were among demonstrators in Paris.

Lyon Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, who has said marriage was defined at the very start of the Bible as created by God to join man and woman, was one of around 10,000 protesters in that city, according to figures from the organisers.

"I'm here like everyone else, like the Protestants, the Catholics, the Muslims, the philosophers, it's a message to politicians so that a debate is organised on such a fundamental issue," he said, adding that he had come as a "simple citizen".

The archbishop of Toulouse, Robert Le Gall, joined 10,000 there, according to organisers. Police said there were 5,000.

(Reporting by Thierry Chiarello, Lucien Libert, Gerard Bon and Tom Heneghan in Paris, Catherine Lagrange in Lyon; Writing by James Regan; editing by Jason Webb)

Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.