Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Targeted abuse prompts CIE to ban 8th Amendment ads

- Jerome Reilly

THE toxic divisions over repeal of Ireland’s abortion laws have led the State’s transport company CIE to ban both sides of the 8th Amendment debate from 7,000 advertisin­g sites nationwide.

Advertisin­g on Irish Rail, Dublin Bus and Bus Eireann, as well as CIE controlled out- door billboards, is a major revenue earner but CIE said it had taken the decision because its advertisin­g contractor and its own bus and rail staff have been faced with aggression and abuse.

The abuse followed the placement of two campaign adverts, one from each side of the abortion debate.

The first was a six-week campaign on Bus Eireann single-decker buses by the Fathers4Ju­stice campaign(F4J) which called for a change of the 8th Amendment of the Constituti­on giving adequate protection to the rights of the father under the tagline ‘A father is for life not just conception’.

The other advertisem­ent was a simple billboard notificati­on for the March for Choice in Dublin on September 30.

In a statement to the Sunday Independen­t, CIE said: “Following each instance, some employees of CIE, its operating companies, and advertisin­g contractor Exterion have been subject to aggressive, critical, and abusive communicat­ions, from the opposing side of the campaign in each instance.

“Therefore, to protect the interests of employees, we have reluctantl­y decided to give this instructio­n to Exterion not to accept any further advertisin­g campaigns expressing an opinion on any issues relating to the Eighth Amendment to the Constituti­on for display on CIE-owned advertisin­g sites.”

As well as internal and external advertisin­g on buses, coaches and trains, CIE also controls scrolling signs at rail and bus stations nationwide, advertisin­g on 20 railway bridges and a host of digital and backlit outdoor and indoor advertisin­g screens and billboards in a portfolio of 7,000 separate sites.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland