First gay couples tie knot under new Argentine law

BUENOS AIRES, (Reuters) – Gay couples rushed to tie  the knot in Argentina yesterday, two weeks after the country  became the first in Latin America to grant them the same  marriage rights as heterosexual couples.

“We never thought we’d get to this point,” said talent  agent Alejandro Vanelli, 61, who wept as he exchanged vows with  Ernesto Larrese, 60, an actor and his partner of 34 years.

“It was time for our country to embrace equality after  hundreds of years of restricting the rights of so many,” he  said after the service at a Buenos Aires registry office  festooned with rainbow-colored gay rights banners.

Guests threw rice over the newlyweds as they left the  packed office, becoming the second couple to marry under the  law signed by President Cristina Fernandez on July 21. It came  into force on Friday.

Another couple had exchanged vows hours earlier in a  northern province, and gay weddings were planned for today  across the nominally Roman Catholic country.      The measure, which also lets same-sex couples adopt  children, puts Argentina at the vanguard of gay rights in the  region and underlines the Catholic Church’s waning influence in  Latin America.

Same-sex couples in Mexico City won the same rights as  heterosexuals to marry and adopt children in December. Uruguay  allows same-sex couples to adopt but not to marry.

A few gay couples were married in Argentina prior to the  law, but they had been granted marriage licenses under one-off  court rulings.