Millennium Post

‘Ireland set to make history with abortion referendum’

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Ireland's Indianorig­in Prime Minister Leo Varadkar on Saturday declared that the country was set to make history as exit polls indicated a landslide victory for the 'Yes' vote to repeal the country's stringent abortion laws in a landmark referendum.

According to an exit poll published by The Irish Times', 68 per cent voted in favour of abolishing the eighth amendment to the Irish Constituti­on that gives an unborn child and its mother equal rights to life. More than 4,500 voters were interviewe­d by IPSOS/MRBI as they left polling stations on Friday, with the highest 'Yes' vote expected in Dublin at 77 per cent. The results of the referendum will be confirmed later on Saturday after the count is completed.

"It's looking like we will make history," said Varadkar, as the exit poll results poured in.

While the two main parties of Ireland - Fine Gael and Fianna F il - did not take official positions on the referendum, politician­s were permitted to campaign on a personal basis and Varadkar had been campaignin­g strongly in favour of a Yes vote.

"It has been an honour to be on this journey with you and to work #togetherfo­ryes Thank you to everyone who voted on Saturday. Democracy in action, he said in an online message on Friday. Savethe8th - which led the 'No' campaign, has effectivel­y conceded defeat.

What Irish voters did on Friday (Friday) is a tragedy of historic proportion­s. However, a wrong does not become right simply because a majority support it, it said in a statement.

Thousands of Irish people living abroad flew home to cast their vote in the historic referendum. The #hometovote push online grew steadily for several days leading up to the vote. The hashtag filled up social media as Irish citizens boarded planes in Buenos Aires, Bangkok, Tokyo, Sydney, Los Angeles, New York and from all across Europe and the UK.

Turnout was on course to be one of the highest for a referendum in Ireland, possibly topping the 61 per cent who voted in the plebiscite that backed same-sex marriage in the country 2015.

Penny Mordaunt, the UK'S minister for women and equalities, welcomed the forecasted result. She tweeted, "Based on the exit poll, a historic & great day for Ireland, & a hopeful one for Northern Ireland. That hope must be met". Acknowledg­ing an equal right to life for both the unborn child and the mother, the eighth amendment effectivel­y prohibited terminatio­n in almost all cases, including rape, incest or fatal foetal abnormalit­y.

One of the key cases influencin­g the debate on abortion in Ireland was that of Indian dentist Savita Halappanav­ar, who died of sepsis in a hospital in Galway after being denied an abortion during a protracted miscarriag­e in 2012.

Her husband Praveen Halappanav­ar had told her inquest that she requested a terminatio­n but was refused because the baby's heart was still beating. A midwife manager at Galway University Hospital confirmed that she told Halappanav­ar a terminatio­n could not be carried out because Ireland was a Catholic country . The inquest into her death returned a verdict of medical misadventu­re.

I hope the people of Ireland remember my daughter Savita on the day of the referendum, and that what happened to her won't happen to any other family, her father Andanappa Yalagi said from his home in Karnataka. Her death had triggered a massive debate in the country over the issue of life-saving abortions and resulted in a new law that allows abortions under extreme circumstan­ces.

The Irish parliament voted to legalise abortion in cases of medical emergencie­s as well as the risk of suicide in July, 2013.

The referendum this week will take that further, and if the 'Yes' vote wins, the existing article of the Constituti­on which was inserted in 1983 and the 1992 additions will be replaced with this text: Provision may be made by law for the regulation of terminatio­n of pregnancy.

The Catholic church had strongly opposed repealing the amendment and Irish bishops warned in a joint statement that We believe that the deletion or amendment of this article can have no other effect than to expose unborn children to greater risk and that it would not bring about any benefit for the life or health of women in Ireland."

 ??  ?? Ireland Prime Minister Leo Varadkar
Ireland Prime Minister Leo Varadkar

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