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The new policy applies to the UN's approximately 43,000 employees worldwide. Photograph: Alamy Photograph: Alamy
The new policy applies to the UN's approximately 43,000 employees worldwide. Photograph: Alamy Photograph: Alamy

United Nations to recognise gay marriages of all its staffers

This article is more than 9 years old

Policy expanded to include not just the marriages of staffers who come from countries where gay marriage is legal

The United Nations has decided to recognise the gay marriages of all its staffers, UN secretary general Ban Ki-moon announced on Monday.

Previously, the United Nations only recognised the unions of employees who came from countries where gay marriage is legal, UN deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said.

"This is a step forward that many of the staffers at the United Nations had been seeking for some time," Haq said.

The new policy became effective on 26 June, and applies to the UN's approximately 43,000 employees worldwide. Employees of separate UN agencies, such as the children's agency Unicef and the UN cultural agency Unseco, are not affected by the change in policy, Haq said.

According to the Pew Research Center, gay marriage is legal in 18 countries, plus parts of the United States and Mexico. But prejudice remains deep in many countries. An extreme case is Uganda, which in February passed a law making gay sex punishable by a life sentence.

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  • Civil partnerships can be converted to marriages from December

  • Gay marriage is finally here – but the fight for equality goes on

  • Gay people face discrimination when arranging funerals, survey reveals

  • Gay football fan groups take the lead on equal rights on the terraces and pitch

  • Chaplain accuses Church of England of homophobia

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