Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
International

Alaska joins US states permitting gay marriage

Darpan News Desk IANS, 14 Oct, 2014 10:38 AM
  • Alaska joins US states permitting gay marriage
Gay couples in the US state of Alaska may now request for the necessary documents to marry due to a court ruling that after 16 years revoked the constitutional amendment banning such unions.
 
In a ruling issued late Sunday, federal Judge Timothy Burgess found in favour of five gay couples who had sued the state of Alaska in an attempt to nullify the constitutional amendment approved by voters in 1998.
 
The judge said in his ruling that the amendment violates due process and the equal protection clause of the US Constitution.
 
Alaska authorities may appeal the ruling.
 
Alaska and Hawaii in 1998 were the first states to pass constitutional amendments against same-sex marriage.
 
Recent decisions by the US Supreme Court and other lower courts have resulted in there being more than 30 US states that now allow gay marriage.
 
A week ago, the US high court rejected the appeals of five states -- Virginia, Oklahoma, Utah, Wisconsin and Indiana -- which were seeking to prohibit gay marriage in a ruling that cleared the way for same-sex couples to marry in six other states: Colorado, Kansas, North and South Carolina, West Virginia and Wyoming.
 
Just a day later, a federal appeals court issued a ruling overturning the prohibitions on gay marriage in Idaho and Nevada.
 
Nevertheless, a Supreme Court justice later imposed a temporary suspension on gay marriage in Idaho.
 
Analysts believed that the high court was going to find in favour of same-sex unions in at least one or two cases concerning gay marriage during the recently-begun judicial session by issuing a ruling with national implications before June 2015.
 
However, the Supreme Court has avoided entering into the debate on the legalisation of gay marriage on the national level.

MORE International ARTICLES

US fighter jet crashes in Virginia

US fighter jet crashes in Virginia
A US F-15C Eagle fighter jet crashed Wednesday morning near Deerfield in Virginia during a routine mission, Pentagon confirmed....

US fighter jet crashes in Virginia

Ebola epidemic to get worse: health official

Ebola epidemic to get worse: health official
The Ebola outbreak in West Africa will get worse before it gets better, said a top public health official, the BBC reported Thursday....

Ebola epidemic to get worse: health official

Uzi Killing In Arizona Displays Tragic Side Of Gun Tourism As It Grows In Popularity

Uzi Killing In Arizona Displays Tragic Side Of Gun Tourism As It Grows In Popularity
LAS VEGAS, Nev. - The death of an Arizona firearms instructor by a 9-year-old girl who was firing a fully automatic Uzi displayed a tragic side of what has become a hot industry in the U.S.: gun tourism.

Uzi Killing In Arizona Displays Tragic Side Of Gun Tourism As It Grows In Popularity

UK Pakistani Community Says Racism Fears Should Have Never Prevented Reporting On Child Abuse

UK Pakistani Community Says Racism Fears Should Have Never Prevented Reporting On Child Abuse
Rotherham is a working-class town that is remarkable in its ordinariness — a collection of charmless discount stores, betting shops and kebab counters, surrounded by sleepy residential streets lined with brick houses that have seen better days.

UK Pakistani Community Says Racism Fears Should Have Never Prevented Reporting On Child Abuse

Pooches In A Pot? Pet-Mad Young Koreans Say No To Elders' Taste For Dog, Prefer To Raise Pups

Pooches In A Pot? Pet-Mad Young Koreans Say No To Elders' Taste For Dog, Prefer To Raise Pups
SEOUL, South Korea - For more than 30 years, chef and restaurant owner Oh Keum-il built her expertise in cooking one traditional South Korean delicacy: dog meat.

Pooches In A Pot? Pet-Mad Young Koreans Say No To Elders' Taste For Dog, Prefer To Raise Pups

US Journalist's Mother Pleads For His Life As Photos Show Killings By Islamic State Gunmen

US Journalist's Mother Pleads For His Life As Photos Show Killings By Islamic State Gunmen
BEIRUT - The mother of a hostage American journalist pleaded for his release Wednesday in a video directed at the Islamic State group, while new images emerged of mass killings, including masked militants shooting kneeling men after the capture of a strategic air base in Syria.

US Journalist's Mother Pleads For His Life As Photos Show Killings By Islamic State Gunmen