BRITAIN will announce plans next
week to allow gay marriages in churches and other religious buildings,
officials say, although Prime Minister David Cameron insists no faith
group would be forced to hold them.
Culture Secretary Maria Miller will unveil ministers' responses to a
consultation earlier this year, which will propose that religious
organisations should be able to "opt-in" to hold same-sex weddings,
according to a government source.
Amid strong opposition from the
Church of England and Roman Catholics, however, as well as many members
of Cameron's Conservative Party, Miller will stress that no religious
groups will be forced to conduct gay weddings.
"I'm a massive
supporter of marriage and I don't want gay people to be excluded from a
great institution," Cameron told reporters during a visit to a car
factory on Friday.
"But let me be absolutely 100 per cent clear,
if there is any church or any synagogue or any mosque that doesn't want
to have a gay marriage it will not, absolutely must not, be forced to
hold it.
"That is absolutely clear in the legislation.
"Also let me make clear, this is a free vote for members of parliament but personally I will be supporting it."
Gay
couples have had the right to hold a civil partnership since 2004 but
campaigners have pushed for full equality with heterosexual couples.
The Church of England repeated its opposition in a statement on Friday.
"We
believe that redefining marriage to include same-sex relationships will
entail a dilution in the meaning of marriage," it said.
In its
submission to the public consultation in June, the Church said
legalising gay marriage could force it out of its traditional role of
conducting weddings on behalf of the state.
However, the Quakers
welcomed Friday's news, saying they had been campaigning since 2009 for
all marriages in Quaker meeting houses to be legally valid.
"We
are waiting for the law to catch up," said recording clerk Paul Parker,
adding, "For Quakers, this is an issue of religious freedom and we don't
seek to impose this on others."
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