Saturday, December 13, 2025
ADVT 
National

UK Top Court Split On Transgender Woman's Pension Right

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Aug, 2016 01:16 PM
    LONDON — Britain's top court said Wednesday it was unable to agree on the case of a transgender woman who was denied a female pension because she refused to divorce her wife.
     
    Five Supreme Court judges said the Court of Justice of the European Union must decide the case.
     
    The claimant, who is now 68, applied for her state pension at age 60 in 2008, but was refused because she did not hold an official "gender recognition certificate." She was told she would have to wait till 65, the age for men.
     
    Under the law at the time, to get a certificate the applicant would have had to end her marriage to the wife she wed in 1974, when she was a man.
     
    The judges said the claimant is a Christian and "she and her wife continued and still continue to live together and wish to remain married. For religious reasons, they are unwilling to see their marriage annulled."
     
    The Supreme Court justices said the Luxembourg-based European court would have to decide whether, under EU law, Britain had the right to insist that "a person who has changed gender must also be unmarried in order to qualify for a state retirement pension."
     
    Britain voted in June to leave the EU but is likely to remain a member for several years while complex divorce proceedings are worked out.
     
    The claimant, identified only as MB, has fought her legal battle against the government for years. In 2014, the Court of Appeal ruled against her, but acknowledged she had suffered "a real misfortune," and legal changes had "come too late" to help her.
     
    Britain legalized same-sex marriage in 2014, and transgender people can now receive recognition of their new gender while remaining married.
     
    The government is also raising the pension age for women so that it converges with the age for men.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Calgary Brothers Who Sexually Assaulted Teen Girl Deserve 12-year Sentences

    Calgary Brothers Who Sexually Assaulted Teen Girl Deserve 12-year Sentences
    Supporters of a 17-year-old Calgary girl who was randomly kidnapped and sexually assaulted by two brothers nearly two years ago sent the judge a silent message at a court appearance Wednesday.

    Calgary Brothers Who Sexually Assaulted Teen Girl Deserve 12-year Sentences

    Pair Charged With Scalping Tickets To Tragically Hip Concert In Winnipeg

    Pair Charged With Scalping Tickets To Tragically Hip Concert In Winnipeg
    Winnipeg police have arrested two people for allegedly scalping tickets to a Tragically Hip concert.

    Pair Charged With Scalping Tickets To Tragically Hip Concert In Winnipeg

    Richard Henry Bain Didn't Hold Bizarre Or Psychotic Religious Or Political Ideas: Doctor

    MONTREAL — The Crown's expert witness in the Richard Henry Bain first-degree murder trial says the accused did not hold religious or political ideas that were bizarre or psychotic.

    Richard Henry Bain Didn't Hold Bizarre Or Psychotic Religious Or Political Ideas: Doctor

    'Internet Black Widow' Melissa Shepard pleads not guilty to breach charges

    'Internet Black Widow' Melissa Shepard pleads not guilty to breach charges
    HALIFAX — An elderly woman who gained notoriety for killing and poisoning her intimate partners has pleaded not guilty to violating the conditions of a peace bond.

    'Internet Black Widow' Melissa Shepard pleads not guilty to breach charges

    MP Hunter Tootoo Says He Quit Caucus, Cabinet Over 'Consensual Relationship'

    MP Hunter Tootoo Says He Quit Caucus, Cabinet Over 'Consensual Relationship'
    OTTAWA — Nunavut MP Hunter Tootoo, who cited an alcohol problem for leaving the Liberal caucus and cabinet earlier this year, apologized Wednesday for what he called a "consensual but inappropriate" relationship with an unidentified person.

    MP Hunter Tootoo Says He Quit Caucus, Cabinet Over 'Consensual Relationship'

    Canada Not Required To Provide Minimum Number Of Jets To NATO: Report

    Canada Not Required To Provide Minimum Number Of Jets To NATO: Report
    OTTAWA — Canada is not required to provide a certain number of fighter jets to NATO, says a Defence Department report that's raising fresh questions about the Liberal government's rush to buy a new warplane.

    Canada Not Required To Provide Minimum Number Of Jets To NATO: Report