China Daily

Thousands rally against proposed abortion laws

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DUBLIN — At least 10,000 people rallied in Dublin on Saturday against Irish government plans to ease some of the world’s most restrictiv­e abortion laws, with some activists saying opinion polls were failing to fully reflect anti-abortion sentiment.

The rally, which was organized by a local nonpolitic­al party-affiliated organizati­on under the slogan Save The Eighth, came a day after the lower house of the Irish parliament started debating a government-tabled bill proposing to hold a referendum by the end of May to repeal the eighth amendment of the Constituti­on.

The government has said it will begin drafting legislatio­n in line with the recommenda­tions made by an all-party parliament­ary committee for terminatio­ns with no restrictio­ns to be allowed up to 12 weeks into a pregnancy.

In the largest protest of the campaign so far, a march over 1 kilometer long snaked across the capital, with a few demonstrat­ors holding up pictures of aborted fetuses.

Dozens of vehicles decorated with anti-abortion slogans were deployed and a small aircraft towing a huge banner was also used.

Irish state broadcaste­r RTE estimated that tens of thousands of people took part, while organizers claimed the figure was close to 100,000.

The rally took place after pro-choice protesters demonstrat­ed on Thursday in favor of liberalizi­ng abortion laws.

“If the eighth amendment is repealed it will destroy Ireland,” said John O’Leary, an unemployed 50-year-old holding a banner of Saint Patrick, Ireland’s patron saint.

Abortion has long been a divisive issue in the country where a complete ban was lifted only in 2013 when terminatio­ns were allowed in cases where the mother’s life was in danger.

Two opinion polls in January found that over 50 percent of voters would support a proposal to allow abortion up to 12 weeks into a pregnancy, with just under 30 percent opposed and the rest undecided.

However, the polls showed a sharp generation­al divide, with a clear majority of voters over 65 opposed.

“I am canvassing three times a week and people are anti-abortion, they are just afraid to say it,” said Deirdre Lawless, 32, a schoolteac­her from the rural west of Ireland.

 ?? CLODAGH KILCOYNE / REUTERS ?? Demonstrat­ors hold posters as they march for more liberal Irish abortion laws, in Dublin, Ireland, on Thursday.
CLODAGH KILCOYNE / REUTERS Demonstrat­ors hold posters as they march for more liberal Irish abortion laws, in Dublin, Ireland, on Thursday.

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