Hong Kong's top court rules in favor of equal inheritance and housing
benefits for same-sex couples
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[November 26, 2024]
By KANIS LEUNG
HONG KONG (AP) — Hong Kong’s top court on Tuesday upheld earlier rulings
that favored subsidized housing benefits and equal inheritance rights
for same-sex married couples, in a landmark victory for the city's LGBTQ+
community.
The Court of Final Appeal's dismissal of the government's appeals ended
some yearslong legal battles over the differential treatment facing
same-sex couples married overseas under Hong Kong’s Housing Authority
policies and two inheritance laws.
The unanimous decisions are expected to have a far-reaching impact on
the lives of same-sex couples, who have traditionally had fewer rights
compared to their heterosexual counterparts in the global financial hub.
Chief Justice Andrew Cheung said in his judgement that exclusionary
housing policies were argued to be beneficial to opposite-sex married
couples because they increase the supply of subsidized housing for them
and thereby support the institution of traditional families.
But Cheung said authorities failed to provide evidence showing the
potential impact on opposite-sex couples if those policies were relaxed.
“The challenged policies cannot be justified,” he wrote.
On the inheritance laws, judges Roberto Ribeiro and Joseph Fok ruled
that the disputed provisions are “discriminatory and unconstitutional"
in their written judgement.
The Housing Authority said in a statement it respects the court’s
decisions, adding it will study the judgements and seek legal advice, if
necessary, on follow-up actions.
Hong Kong does not recognize same-sex marriage, prompting some couples
to marry elsewhere.
Currently, the city only recognizes same-sex marriage for certain
purposes such as taxation, civil service benefits and dependent visas.
Many of the government’s concessions were won through legal challenges,
and the city has seen a growing social acceptance toward same-sex
marriage.
In September 2023, the top court ruled that the government should
provide a framework for recognizing same-sex partnerships. This ruling,
along with other successful legal challenges brought by members of the
LGBTQ+ community, made Hong Kong the only place in China to grant such
recognition for same-sex couples.
In separate judgements handed down in 2020 and 2021, a lower court had
ruled that the housing policies involved in Tuesday's cases violated the
constitutional right to equality, and that excluding same-sex spouses
from inheritance law benefits constituted unlawful discrimination.
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A participant holds a rainbow flag at the annual Pride Parade in
Hong Kong, Nov. 17, 2018. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung, File)
The government had challenged these decisions at the Court of Appeal
but subsequently lost in October 2023. It then took the cases to the
top court.
Nick Infinger, who first launched a judicial review against the
Housing Authority in 2018, told reporters that Tuesday's rulings
“acknowledged same-sex couples can love each other and deserve to
live together."
“This is not only fighting for me and for my partner, but this is
fighting for all the same-sex couples in Hong Kong,” he said outside
the court building.
But he added he was still “a bit pessimistic” about whether Hong
Kong could become like Taiwan and Thailand in legalizing same-sex
marriage.
Hong Kong Marriage Equality, a non-governmental organization, said
in a statement that the judges' decisions made it clear that
discrimination and differential treatment on the grounds of sexual
orientation violate human dignity and equality. It called on the
government to immediately end the exclusion of same-sex couples from
marriage.
The top court’s rulings also concluded a long legal journey taken by
Henry Li and his late partner, Edgar Ng. After they married in
Britain in 2017, Ng bought a subsidized flat as his matrimonial home
with Li.
The Housing Authority, however, said Li could not be added as an
authorized occupant of the flat in the capacity of Ng's family
member because same-sex married partners do not fall within its
definition of “spouse." Ng was also concerned that if he died
intestate, his proprieties would not be passed to Li, the court
heard.
Ng died in 2020 after suffering years of depression.
After the rulings, Li posted a message on his Facebook account,
saying that although he has lived in pain in the absence of Ng, he
has not given up his husband's aspiration to pursue equality.
“Without you by my side, the arguments of the government and the
Housing Authority in the cases seemed to become more cruel, causing
me even more distress,” he wrote to Ng in the message. “I hope you
can still hear everyone’s recognition of you.”
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