China Daily (Hong Kong)

Abortion backed

Ireland votes in favor of scrapping restrictiv­e laws

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DUBLIN — Hundreds of people, mostly women, gathered in the court of an 18th century government building complex in the downtown area of the Irish capital Dublin on Saturday evening.

They burst into cheers, some of them even tears when a returning officer declared that the majority of the voters in the country’s Friday abortion referendum had voted Yes for scrapping a law that has virtually banned abortions in the country for more than three decades.

According to the final results of the referendum announced by the returning officer Barry Ryan at Dublin Castle, which is temporaril­y made as a central count center of the referendum, 64.1 percent of the people out of the nearly 3.37 million registered voters turned out in Friday’s 15-hour voting at around 6,500 polling stations across the country. Sixty-six percent of the voters cast their Yes ballots for repealing the Eighth Amendment, with the No vote rate standing at 34 percent.

The Eighth Amendment, or simply called the eighth by locals, is an article written into the Irish constituti­on after a 1983 referendum, which stresses equal importance of right to life for the unborn child and its mother and does not permit abortions unless the life of the mother is in danger or the fetus is proven by doctors to be dead before or shortly after birth.

Due to the strict abortion laws in Ireland, many pregnant women, especially those who get pregnant because of rape and incest or face fetal abnormalit­ies in developmen­t, either have to travel to the neighborin­g country of Britain for terminatio­ns of pregnancy or secretly take abortion pills sought illegally without proper counseling or medical care.

Statistics released by the Irish government officials say that each year over 3,000 Irish women have to take a flight or a boat to travel abroad for abortions and an estimated 170,000 Irish women have reportedly received abortions overseas since 1980s.

Abortion has become a serious social issue in Ireland and also a reality in the country despite the constituti­onal ban on it. That explains why the turnout of the Friday’s referendum is much higher than many of the previous referendum­s held in the country, local media quoted experts as saying.

“Done right”

Talking to local media while visiting his constituen­cy in Dublin West on Saturday afternoon, Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said that Friday’s referendum marked a culminatio­n of “a quiet revolution” which has taken place in the country over the last few decades.

He also said that a modern Ireland needs a modern legislatio­n.

Mary Lou McDonald, the female leader of the Ireland’s third largest party Sinn Fein, said: “We have without doubt done right by Irish women for this generation and many to come.”

Leaders of the major opposition parties in Ireland have expressed their support for changing the country’s abortion laws despite the fact that some of their party members, especially those who are parliament­arians, are against the change of the constituti­onal ban on abortions.

Varadkar said the new abortion legislatio­n is expected to be passed by the Irish parliament by the end of this year as it will go through legal procedures and many technical things need to be sorted out before the new law get enacted.

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 ?? CLODAGH KILCOYNE / REUTERS ?? People celebrate the result of the referendum on liberalizi­ng the abortion law, in Dublin, Ireland, on Saturday.
CLODAGH KILCOYNE / REUTERS People celebrate the result of the referendum on liberalizi­ng the abortion law, in Dublin, Ireland, on Saturday.

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