Malta's parliament on Monday adopted a law authorising divorce that
is now set for formal approval by the president and likely to come into
force in October in this overwhelmingly Catholic nation.
The law
was passed by 52 in favour and 11 against with five abstentions,
following a referendum in May which voted in favour of the change
despite the opposition of Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi and his
Nationalist Party.
The Mediterranean island state, which has a
church every square kilometre, is the only European Union member to ban
divorce.
The Philippines and the Vatican are the only two other
sovereign states in the world that outlaw it.
"The amendments to
the original Divorce Bill had improved the law but this does not mean
I'm happy with it," Gonzi told reporters after Monday's vote.
He
added that he would feel "uncomfortable" about the introduction of
divorce in Malta, which is "why I voted against it," he said.
He
had, however, allowed his MPs to vote according to their conscience and
19 of the Nationalist Party's 35 deputies ended up voting in favour.
Opposition
leader Joseph Muscat hailed the vote but said he was disappointed that
the prime minister had voted against the people's will in parliament.
The
law will allow divorce after legal separation of four years. Much of
the debate in parliament was over maintenance for children of divorcees.
The
Roman Catholic Church, which looms large over the archipelago where 95
percent of the population is Catholic, did not campaign officially in
May's non-binding referendum in which 53 percent of voters cast ballots
in favour.
However, Valletta's Archbishop Paul Cremona had warned
churchgoers in a letter they faced a choice between building and
destroying family values.
In addition, priests reportedly threatened to refuse communion to those who voted "yes".
Abortion is still banned in Malta.
"The Church's word is no longer heeded," Father Alfred Micallef wrote in an editorial for the Times of Malta on Sunday.
"Few could understand why society should deny divorce to those who wanted it as long as it was not imposed on all," he added.
Legal
separation is widespread in Malta but marriages currently can only be
annulled by the Catholic Church's Ecclesiastical Tribunal in a complex
and rare procedure that takes around eight years.
The only
exception to the divorce ban is for Maltese who are married to foreign
nationals or Maltese who are permanent residents abroad.
Before Malta, Chile was the last country to legalise divorce in 2004 after overwhelming public pressure.