The highest court in Ecuador, on Wednesday, approved same-sex marriage in a new landmark ruling case seeking to expand LGBT rights in the small and traditionally Catholic country.

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The decision by the nine-member constitutional court came on the back of lawsuits by two same-sex couples who wanted to get married.

The constitutional court in Quito, Ecuador’s capital city, extended gay marriage rights across the country after a five-to-four approval vote.

The move comes barely a week After Botswana’s high court decriminalised homosexuality and makes Ecuador the sixth country in Latin America to legally recognise same-sex relationships.

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“It means that Ecuador is more egalitarian. It is more just than yesterday, that it recognizes that human rights must be for all people without discrimination,” said Christian Paula, a lawyer at the Patka Foundation, an organisation providing legal advice to same-sex couples in the country.

Other Latin American countries including Argentina; Uruguay; Brazil; Columbia; and Mexico have all given constitutional recognition to same-sex marriages. Ecuador had been dwelling on its de facto recognition of same since 2015.

Although ratified in 2008, Ecuador’s current constitution had defined marriage as the union between a man and a woman and also barred same-sex couples from adopting children.

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It’s constitutional court judges, however, said they delivered the new verdict to counter remnant discriminations on the basis that “all people are equal” with respect to its marriage laws.



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