Amsterdam In the country that first legalised gay marriage, the Dutch crown queen has the right to marry a person of any gender without giving up her right to the throne, the high minister said on Tuesday Crown Princess Catharina-Amalia, 17, has not made any commentary on the matter, and little is known of her particular life. The question arose after lately published books argued that the country’s rules count the possibility of a same- coitus royal couple.
But Prime Minister Mark Rutte said times have changed since one of his forerunners last addressed the issue in the time 2000 The government believes that the inheritor can also marry a person of the same coitus,”Rutte wrote in a letter to congress The press thus doesn’t see that an inheritor to the throne or the King should abnegate if he/ she would like to marry a mate of the same coitus.”
Gay marriage was legalized in the Netherlands in 2001 Rutte said that one issue remains undetermined how a gay marriage would affect latterly race of the royal couple’s children. And it does not make sense to try to decide that now, he said “It’s just veritably dependent on the data and circumstances of the specific case, as you can see by looking back at how family law can change over time,”he wrote.
Unlike regular marriages, royal marriages need the blessing of congress. Members of the Dutch royal house have on occasion given up their place in the line of race to marry someone without authorization Except for the caption, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a distributed feed.)