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Australia’s First Same-Sex Divorce Was Filed Over the Weekend

Australia's landmark decision doesn't mean nuptials for everyone.

Supporters of the 'Yes' vote react as they celebrate after it was announced the majority of Australians support same-sex marriage in a national survey, at a rally in Sydney

Australia’s decision to legalize same-sex marriage doesn’t mean wedding bells for all of the country’s gay couples.

Two women in Perth filed for divorce Sunday after a year of limbo. The couple, who remain anonymous for legal reasons, wed in 2015 at the embassy of a European nation in Australia. When they decided to split, they found they couldn’t get divorced in either country: The country that married them wouldn’t divorce them because they were not residents and Australia didn’t recognize same-sex marriage.

When the Parliament of Australia legalized gay marriage earlier this month after a postal vote surveyed the entire country, longtime couples got engaged by the dozens. One MP even proposed to his partner during a speech in Parliament.

This may not be the only divorce allowed by the new legislation. In 2015, a straight married couple in Australia said they would get divorced on principle if the country legalized gay marriage, as they didn’t recognize the state’s right to re-define the institution. They walked back their pledge after the vote in Parliament.

A lawyer for the woman who filed the divorce papers said “She is now very relieved. She has re-partnered and she just wants to get on with life.”

It might not be “‘till death do us part,” but it’s a happy ending nonetheless.