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French court allows gay French-Moroccan couple to wed

Judges in France rule that the couple can marry despite the North African kingdom’s refusal to recognise same-sex marriages.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

France’s highest court ruled on Wednesday that a gay French-Moroccan couple are allowed to marry despite the North African kingdom’s refusal to recognise same-sex marriages, reports FRANCE 24.

France legalised gay marriage in 2013, but a 1981 agreement between France and Morocco says marriages between French and Moroccans are subject to the law of their respective countries.

The gay couple first took the case to court after a city hall in France had refused to wed them, citing the 1981 convention, local media reported.

But on Wednesday, the appeals court ruled that as long as a foreign partner has a connection with France, such as residence, then the marriage must be permitted under French law.

Morocco is one of 11 countries to have signed an agreement with France requiring their citizens to respect his or her own nation’s laws on marriage.

Read more of this report from FRANCE 24.