PRESS ASSOCIATION -- A man and a woman whose sex-change operation was paid for by the state tied the knot in a first-of-its-kind wedding for Cuba, a sign of how much the country's attitude toward sexuality has changed since gays and transsexuals suffered persecution in the early years after the revolution.
Bride Wendy Iriepa, 37, arrived at a Havana wedding hall in the afternoon in a vintage Ford convertible and a full white wedding gown, flowers in her hair and holding a rainbow flag.
Neighbourhood residents came out of their homes to gawk at the wedding party and the journalists mobbing the car.
"This is the first wedding between a transsexual woman and a gay man," said the 31-year-old groom, Ignacio Estrada. "We celebrate it at the top of our voices and affirm that this is a step forward for the gay community in Cuba."
Inside, a public notary joined them in a brief civil ceremony and the newlyweds kissed to cheers from friends and family.
Gay marriage is not legal in Cuba and the wedding does nothing to change that since Ms Iriepa, born Alexis, is a woman in the eyes of the law.
Ms Iriepa had sex-change surgery in 2007 as part of a pilot programme that began in earnest the following year and made gender-reassignment procedures part of the island's universal health care system.
One other transgender woman married many years ago, but Ms Iriepa is the first to do so under the new policy.
In the early years after Fidel Castro's 1959 revolution, homosexuality was considered highly suspect along with other "alternative" forms of expression, such as US fashion trends and rock and roll. Many gays and transsexuals were fired from government jobs, jailed, sent to work camps or left for exile.
Today, even if deep-seated macho attitudes toward homosexuality have not entirely disappeared, the island and its government are much more tolerant.