LGBT rights in Estonia

LGBT rights in Estonia
Location of  Estonia  (dark green)

 in Europe  (light green & dark grey)
 in the European Union  (light green)   [Legend]

Same-sex sexual intercourse legal status Decriminalized in 1992, age of consent equalized in 2001
Gender identity/expression Gender change is recognized by law
Military service Gays, lesbians and bisexuals allowed to serve openly
Discrimination protections Sexual orientation and gender identity protections (see below)
Family rights
Recognition of
relationships
Cohabitation agreement since 1 January 2016;
Same-sex marriages performed abroad recognised since 2016
Adoption Stepchild adoption only

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people in Estonia face legal challenges not experienced by non-LGBT residents. Both male and female same-sex sexual activity are legal in Estonia. Since 1 January 2016, same-sex couples may register their relationship as a cohabitation agreement, which gives them almost all the same legal protections available to opposite-sex couples. Nevertheless, same-sex couples are unable to marry or jointly adopt.

Estonia is considered, by most, to be the most liberal former-Soviet country when it comes to LGBT rights.[1] Acceptance of LGBT people has grown significantly since the early 21st century, though there is a notable age gap, as younger people tend to be more tolerant and liberal, while older people tend to be more socially conservative.

Law regarding same-sex sexual activity

Same-sex sexual activity between males, which was illegal in the Soviet Union, was legalised in Estonia in 1992. The age of consent is 14 years and was equalized for both homosexual and heterosexual sex in 2001.[2]

Recognition of same-sex relationships

Cohabitation agreements

In March 2014, a parliamentary group began to work on a draft bill to regulate the legal status of cohabiting couples.[3] The draft bill was submitted to the Parliament (Riigikogu) on 17 April 2014. On 22 May, the bill was backed by the Government.[4] On 19 June 2014, the Parliament rejected a motion to kill the bill, in a 32-45 vote.[5] The bill's second reading took place on 8 October where a motion to hold a referendum on the issue was defeated in a 35-42 vote and another motion to kill the bill was defeated in a 41-33 vote.[6] The bill's final vote took place on 9 October, where it was passed 40-38.[7] It was signed by President Toomas Hendrik Ilves that same day and took effect on 1 January 2016.[8] The campaign against the law was led by the Christian conservative foundation For Family and Tradition.

However, some implementing acts required for the law to enter into force have yet to be passed. On 26 November 2015, Parliament approved the first implementing acts on a vote of 42-41 with several abstentions,[9] though nothing has happened since. In February 2017, the Tallinn Administrative Court ordered the Estonian Government to pay monetary damages for failing to adopt the implementing acts.[10] In September 2017, President Kersti Kaljulaid criticised the Parliament for failing to accept the implementing acts.[11]

Recognition of same-sex marriages performed abroad

The first same-sex marriage was recognised by a court in December 2016.[12] The couple, two men who had originally married in Sweden but now live in Estonia, had their marriage officially registered in late January 2017.[13][14] Initially, a court in Harju County refused to register their marriage, but the couple appealed the decision. In December, the Tallinn Circuit Court ruled that all marriages performed in another country must be entered into the Estonian population register when a person takes up residence in Estonia or is granted Estonian citizenship.[14]

Adoption and family law

Single gay, lesbian and bisexual persons may petition to adopt and same-sex couples are allowed to foster. Same-sex couples can't adopt jointly because Estonian law states that only a married couple can do so.

However, due to the Registered Partnership Act, couples are allowed to adopt stepchilren. In February 2017, the Tallinn Administrative Court allowed a lesbian woman to adopt her partner's children.[15] There have been other cases of same-sex couples successfully adopting.[16] Additionally, lesbian couples have access to IVF.

Discrimination protections

LGBT flag map of Estonia

As an obligation for acceptance into the European Union, Estonia transposed an EU directive into its own laws banning discrimination based on sexual orientation in employment from 1 May 2004. The Law on Equal Treatment, which entered into force on 1 January 2009, also prohibits discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation in areas other than employment, such as health care, social security, education and the provision of goods and services.[17][18]

Since 2006, the Penal Code has prohibited public incitement to hatred on the basis of sexual orientation.[17]

Gender identity and expression

Since June 2002, transgender people in Estonia have been allowed to change their legal gender and name. Additionally, they are not required to undergo sex reassignment surgery, sterilisation or divorce their partner.[1]

Living conditions

Male homosexuality was illegal in the former Soviet Union, including Estonia, although the situation seemed to be more liberal in Estonia than in most other parts of the country. Before the Soviet occupation time, in the 1st Estonian Republic era (1918-1940) same-sex sexual activity was legal in Estonia.[19] In the mid-1980s, there was an unofficial gay bar in Tallinn. There was also at least one cruising area in both Tallinn and Tartu,[20] though outside of these two cities, the gay scene was extremely invisible. The first conference dedicated to sexual minorities took place in Tallinn in 1990. At the same time, the Estonian Lesbian Society (Eesti Lesbiliit) was founded.[21]

Pride parades had been organised in Tallinn from 2004 to 2007, when participants were attacked and beaten by anti-gay protesters.[22]

In June 2006, Dutch Ambassador to Estonia Hans Glaubitz requested he be transferred to the Dutch consulate in Montreal, Canada after ongoing homophobic and racial verbal abuse being hurled against his partner, an Afro-Cuban dancer named Raúl García Lao, by citizens in the capital of Tallinn. A released statement by the Estonian authorities stated that they "regretted the incidents very much".[23]

From 6 June to 12 June 2011, Estonia hosted Baltic Pride, a festival to promote greater support and awareness for LGBT people. Key speakers at the event included Riho Rahuoja, the Deputy Secretary General for Social Policy at the Ministry of Social Affairs; Christian Veske, the Chief Specialist in the Ministry's Gender Equality Department; Kari Käsper, Project Manager of the "Diversity Enriches" campaign from the Estonian Human Rights Centre; Hanna Kannelmäe from the Estonian Gay Youth NGO; U.S. Ambassador to Estonia Michael C. Polt; British Ambassador to Estonia Peter Carter and British photographer Clare B. Dimyon, who exhibited "Proud of our Identity" at Tallinn's Solaris Centre on 31 March. "Proud of our Identity" comprises photographs of and by lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people taken at various Pride events throughout Europe, including photographs of Estonian LGBT people.[24] Tallinn hosted the event again in 2014 and 2017.

After the 2007 violent anti-gay attacks, no Tallinn Pride parade took place in the Estonian capital until 2017. Some 1,800 people attended the event in 2017.[22][25] The pride parade also received the backing of numerous foreign embassies, including the American, British, French, German, Latvian and Lithuanian embassies, among many others.[26]

Public opinion

According to a survey conducted in 2000, 50% of surveyed men and 63% of women agreeded with the statement "Homosexuality among adults is a private affair of the people concerned with which officials of the law should in no way interfere"; 29% of men and 25% of women found it hard to say what their position was.[20]

A Eurobarometer survey published in December 2006 showed that 21% of Estonians surveyed supported same-sex marriage and 14% supported the right of same-sex couples to adopt (EU-wide average: 44% and 33%, respectively).[27]

According to a Eurobarometer survey published in 2008, only 13 percent of Estonians professed to have homosexual friends or acquaintances, compared to a 34 percent average in the EU. However, Estonians ranked higher than the European average in willingness to grant equal opportunities to sexual minorities.[28]

A poll conducted in June 2009 showed that 32% of Estonians believed that same-sex couples should have the same legal rights as opposite-sex couples. Support was 40% among young people, but only 6% among older people.[29]

A poll conducted in September 2012 found that 34% of Estonians supported same-sex marriage and 46% supported registered partnerships. The poll found an ethnic divide: while 51% of ethnic Estonians supported registered partnerships, only 35% of ethnic Russians were of the same view.[30]

The 2015 Eurobarometer survey showed that 44% of Estonians supported gay, lesbian and bisexual people having the same equal rights as heterosexuals, while 45% respondents were opposed. 31% of Estonians supported same-sex marriage.[31]

A poll conducted between 28 March 2017 to 10 April 2017 found that, while support for same-sex registered partnership legislation was unchanged in three years (45% vs 46%), support for same-sex marriages had increased to 39% with 52% against (compared to 60% against in 2012 and 64% against in 2014).[32][33][34] It also found that acceptance of homosexuality had increased from 34% in 2012 to 41% in 2017, with 52% against.[35]

Summary table

Same-sex sexual activity legal (Since 1992)
Equal age of consent (14) (Since 2001)
Anti-discrimination laws in employment only (Since 2004)
Anti-discrimination laws in the provision of goods and services (Since 2009)
Anti-discrimination laws in all other areas (incl. indirect discrimination, hate speech) (Since 2008)
Same-sex marriage / (Same-sex marriages performed abroad recognised since 2016)
Recognition of same-sex couples (Since 2016)
Recognition of adoption for single people regardless of sexual orientation
Stepchild adoption by same-sex couples (Since 2016)
Joint adoption by same-sex couples
Gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgenders allowed to serve openly in the military
Right to change legal gender (Since 2002)
Access to IVF for lesbians
Commercial surrogacy for gay male couples (Illegal for heterosexual couples also)
Conversion therapy banned for minors
MSMs allowed to donate blood

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Rainbow Europe: Estonia
  2. RKLambda Archived 6 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  3. Parliamentary Working Group to Codify Cohabitation
  4. Government Approves Cohabitation Bill
  5. Gender-Neutral Civil Union Bill Survives Early Morning Vote
  6. Cohabitation Bill Heads to Final Vote
  7. Parliament Passes Cohabitation Act Archived 30 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine.
  8. (in Estonian) Riigikogu võttis vastu kooseluseaduse
  9. Cohabitation Act implementing acts pass first reading by single vote
  10. Estonia to pay damages for failing to adopt implementing legislation for civil partnership law
  11. President chides MPs for shunning Partnership Act's implementing provisions
  12. "GAY.RU - В Эстонии однополая пара через суд добилась признания своего брака, заключенного в Швеции". www.gay.ru. Retrieved 2017-01-25.
  13. "Gay couple win right to be married in Estonia". Gay Star News. 30 January 2017.
  14. 1 2 Court orders entry of same-sex marriage into Estonian register
  15. Court: Adoption by same-sex couple must be entered in register Eesti Rahvusringhääling, 22 February 2017
  16. (in Estonian) "Eestis lapsendas esimene samasooline paar kaks last". ERR. March 29, 2016. Retrieved March 25, 2017.
  17. 1 2 European Network of Legal Experts in the Non-Discrimination Field, Executive Summary: Estonia Country Report 2010
  18. Report on Homophobia Archived 10 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine., Fundamental Rights Agency, p.28
  19. Himu oma enese soo järele ehk Kuidas on võim Eestis suhtunud homodesse
  20. 1 2 Estonia Archived 7 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine.
  21. Loe, kus kohtusid geid nõukogude ajal
  22. 1 2 Hundreds March In Estonian Capital To Mark Baltic Pride Festival
  23. Guardian.co.uk: Ambassador quits Estonia over gay abuse by Nick Paton Walsh. 8 June 2006
  24. UK in Estonia: British Embassy presents an exhibition of photos by Clare B Dimyon, MBE: PRIDE Solidarity - “Proud of our Identity”, 31 March - 14 April, 2011
  25. Tallinn Pride to be held again following decade-long break
  26. Foreign embassies’ common declaration in support of Baltic Pride 2017
  27. angus-reid Archived 5 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
  28. The Family Matter
  29. Homopaaride rights advocates, 32% of the population
  30. Uuring: eestlased pole samasooliste kooselu registreerimise vastu
  31. Eurobaromeeter kraadis: sallivuses jääme Euroopa keskmisele tublisti alla
  32. "Avaliku arvamuse uuring LGBT teemadel (2017)" (PDF) (in Estonian). Estonian Human Rights Center.
  33. "Avaliku arvamuse uuring LGBT teemadel (2014)" (PDF) (in Estonian). Estonian Human Rights Center.
  34. "Avaliku arvamuse uuring LGBT teemadel (2012)" (PDF) (in Estonian). Estonian Human Rights Center.
  35. "Eesti elanike hoiakud LGBT teemadel" (in Estonian). Estonian Human Rights Center.
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