
Taiwan is at the vanguard of Asia’s burgeoning LGBTQ rights movement, becoming the first place in the region to legalise marriage equality in 2019.
But same-sex couples still faced restrictions, such as being unable to jointly adopt children.
While individuals in Taiwan were allowed to adopt regardless of sexual orientation, those in same-sex marriages could not both be legal parents unless the child was one partner’s biological offspring.
Today – the eve of the fourth anniversary of Taiwan’s marriage equality law – parliament passed the amendment removing those restrictions, with lawmaker Fan Yun hailing the cross-party support for the bill.
The amendment “not only ensures the protection of children’s rights but also meets their best interest”, said Fan, who was draped in a rainbow flag.
“In the future, spouses and parents, regardless of gender and sexual orientation, can have full legal protection.”
The amendment comes after a family court in southern Kaohsiung City last year ruled in favour of a married gay man seeking to share parenthood of his husband’s adoptive child – the first verdict of its kind.
“After four years of hard work, today the parliament finally passed the (bill for) adoption without blood relationship by same-sex couples,” the advocacy group Taiwan Alliance to Promote Civil Partnership Rights said in a statement.
The group also hailed Taiwan’s recent recognition of transnational same-sex marriage – a move made in January by then-premier Su Tseng Chang to lift restrictions for international couples.
Previously foreigners were not allowed to wed their Taiwanese partners if they came from territories banning same-sex marriage – which is much of Asia.
But one of Su’s last acts in office was to recognise such unions — including for couples from Hong Kong and Macau, though not mainland China, which is governed under a different set of regulations in Taiwan.
“Following the full recognition of transnational same-sex marriage in January, Taiwan has taken another big step towards marriage equality,” the alliance said of the adoption amendment.
Taiwan is home to a thriving LGBTQ community – a record 200,000 people attended a pride march in Taipei in 2019 to celebrate the legalisation of same-sex marriage.
That law came about after Taiwan’s top court ruled that denying same-sex couples the right to marry was discriminatory and unconstitutional.
Over the next two years, at least 7,000 same-sex couples tied the knot according to 2021 data from the interior ministry.
The alliance said today it would continue to push for more rights for same-sex couples, including recognition of Taiwanese-Chinese marriages.