At the start of June, thousands of revelers and activists paraded through the streets of Bangkok and were joined by Prime Minister Srettha, who wore a rainbow shirt to celebrate Pride Month.
On 18 June, Thailand’s Senate voted 130-4 to pass a same-sex marriage bill that the lower house had approved by an overwhelming majority in March.
The Thai Marriage Equality Act now goes to King Vajiralongkorn for royal assent and will come into force 120 days after publication in the Royal Gazette. It will stand as an example of LGBT rights progress across the Asia-Pacific region and the world.
This makes Thailand the first country in Southeast Asia, and the second in Asia, to recognize same-sex relationships.
The Marriage Equality Act makes important amendments to language in Thailand’s Civil and Commercial Code concerning spouses, in particular by changing “men and women” and “husband and wife” to “individuals” and “marriage partners.”
Thirty-seven countries around the world currently recognize same-sex marriage in their national laws, with Liechtenstein being the most recent to pass new legislation this May. Taiwan became the first country in Asia to recognize same-sex marriage in 2019. Nepal has begun to recognize some same-sex marriages under an interim order from the Supreme Court while a final judgment is forthcoming.
The rights to marry and to form a family are recognized in article 23 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which Thailand ratified in 1996. Various United Nations human rights bodies, including the Human Rights Committee, the Committee on the Rights of the Child, and the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women have determined that the idea of a “family,” as understood in international human rights law, does not need to conform to any single model.
Passing same-sex marriage legislation is an opportunity for Thailand to match its positive global reputation on lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) rights with tangible legal protections. For decades, Thailand has been a destination for LGBT tourists and for transgender people seeking gender-affirming health care.
However, Thailand still offers no protections for transgender people, and lawmakers should also consider much-needed legal reforms for trans rights.
“We are very proud to make history,” said Plaifah Kyoka Shodladd, member of a parliamentary committee on same-sex marriage.
“Today love triumphed prejudice … after fighting for more than 20 years, today we can say that this country has marriage equality.”
The bill, the culmination of more than two decades of effort by activists, was supported by an overwhelming majority of lawmakers in the upper house.