France Gay Marriage Protesters Arrested As Bill Moves Forward

Bad News For France's Gay Marriage Opponents
People take part in a protest against gay marriage on April 4, 2013 in front of the French Senate in Paris, on the first day of the debate at France's upper house on the controversial bill to legalise same-sex marriage and adoption. While the upper house is unlikely to reject the groundbreaking reform, it is still expected to be a tight vote as the ruling Socialists enjoy a smaller majority in the Senate than in the National Assembly. AFP PHOTO / PIERRE ANDRIEU (Photo credit should read PIERRE ANDRIEU/AFP/Getty Images)
People take part in a protest against gay marriage on April 4, 2013 in front of the French Senate in Paris, on the first day of the debate at France's upper house on the controversial bill to legalise same-sex marriage and adoption. While the upper house is unlikely to reject the groundbreaking reform, it is still expected to be a tight vote as the ruling Socialists enjoy a smaller majority in the Senate than in the National Assembly. AFP PHOTO / PIERRE ANDRIEU (Photo credit should read PIERRE ANDRIEU/AFP/Getty Images)

PARIS, April 15 (Reuters) - French police arrested dozens of protesters against same-sex marriage on Monday as left-wing lawmakers brought forward the deadline for the adoption of a law that will allow gays to tie the knot.

One of France's most important social reforms since the abolition of the death penalty in 1981 has majority backing in opinion polls but opponents have grown increasingly vocal as legislation edges towards approval in the Socialist-controlled parliament.

Around 70 people were arrested early on Monday and placed in custody after they tried to set up a campsite outside the National Assembly, the lower house of parliament, near the banks of the Seine river, a police official said.

Another 19 protesters were stopped by police for identity checks late on Sunday as they waited for Interior Minister Manuel Valls to leave a concert hall in the capital.

Hundreds of thousands of people have taken part in a string of demonstrations for and against the reform bill since it was floated last year.

Opponents in the majority Catholic country comprise a mix of Catholic hardliners, social conservatives, French Muslims and evangelical Christians.

The government sped up the approval process with a decision on Monday to call a final vote on the gay marriage legislation on April 23, weeks earlier than initially planned, according to a parliamentary source.

The Senate upper house of parliament, which like the National Assembly is under left-wing control, backed the bill last week, after which a final parliamentary vote was slated to take place in late May.

Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault called for restraint after a demonstration last week in Paris's Latin Quarter where riot police used tear gas to disperse protesters.

If the reform, an election promise by President Francois Hollande, goes onto the statute books within months as expected, France will join 11 other countries including Belgium, Portugal, the Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Norway and South Africa where same-sex marriage is legal. (Reporting by Marine Pennetier and Chine Labbe; Writing by Brian Love; editing by Mike Collett-White)

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