Same-sex couples in Namibia lose court bid over spouses

Story By: BBC

A panel of three judges has dismissed an application by same-sex couples in Namibia for their foreign spouses to live and work in the country.

The judges of the High Court ruled that they were bund by a 20-year ruling of the more senior Supreme Court that the relationships of same-sex couples were not recognised by Namibian law, rights activist Omar van Reenen told the BBC’s Shingai Nyoka.

The case centred on two couples: Daniel Digashu and Johan Potgieter and a second couple, Anette Seiler-Lilles and Anita Seiler-Lilles.

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Mr Digashu, a South African, had an application for a work permit denied, while German-born Anita Seiler-Lilles failed in a bid to get permanent residency because of their same-sex marital status, Reuters news agency reports.

Both couples secured their legal partnerships outside Namibia, it says.

Their legal team is expected to appeal against the ruling.

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The case is one of several recent legal challenges to Namibian laws which human rights groups say are outdated and discriminatory.

Last year a Namibian high court granted citizenship to a gay couple’s two-year-old son born via surrogacy.

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