Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Huge crowds join pro-life march in city

Capital sees one of Ireland’s biggest ever anti-abortion demonstrat­ions on Repeal 8th

- Alan O’Keeffe

TENS of thousands of people marched through Dublin yesterday in the one of the country’s biggest ever anti-abortion demonstrat­ions.

Participan­ts in the Rally for Life marched from Parnell Square to Merrion Square, where they were addressed by speakers calling for the retention of the Eighth Amendment in the Constituti­on, which protects life in the womb.

Placard-waving marchers were 10 to 12 abreast at the front of the march as they arrived at Merrion Square while marchers near the rear of the crowd were still leaving O’Connell Street.The demonstrat­ion stretched for well over a kilometre through the city.

Organisers stated 100,000 people joined the rally. The Save the 8th Campaign said the sheer size of the demonstrat­ion made it clear to the Government the extent of opposition to its plan for “a UK-style abortion regime” in Ireland.

Speakers at the rally included doctors and people with disabiliti­es.

A GP, Dr Judy Ceannt, told the crowd: “The basic law that governs our actions as doctors is first do no harm.

“We are not meant to intentiona­lly kill or harm any patient, least of all the most helpless, the unborn baby. The government has no right to impose this on us.”

A majority of Irish GPs in a recent survey said they would not prescribe the abortion pill.

Another doctor, Maire Ne- asta Nic Gearailt, said she would present an optician’s voucher to Senator Catherine Noone, chair of the Oireachtas Committee which recommende­d Repeal of the Eighth, because the senator said she “could not find” any proEighth Amendment doctors.

Ms Charlie Fien, a Down syndrome activist, spoke against the targeting of Down syndrome children in the womb for abortion. She said: “Saving the Eighth will save the lives of babies with Down syndrome. Ireland is one of the only countries in the world where babies with Down syndrome are safe inside their mother’s wombs.”

Save the 8th Campaign manager Niamh Ui Bhriain said “Our message will be focused on ensuring that the Irish people vote ‘No’ to this extreme abortion referendum.

“One of the heartbreak­ing facts we have seen emerging from Britain is that 90pc of babies with Down syndrome are aborted before birth. Charlie Fien’s call to protect babies with a disability is hugely important.”

Destiny Herndon-De La Rosa, who said she was a prolife feminist, said abortion was “the ultimate exploitati­on of women, and is a symptom of women’s oppression”.

Businessma­n Declan Ganley said the coming weeks would be “a battle between the people and the powerful — with the political elites and the taxpayer-funded lobby groups on one side, and the ordinary people on the other”.

“For three or four years there has been a relentless drumbeat for abortion from the media and people in cushy taxpayer-funded lobby groups,” he added.

Mattie McGrath TD said abortion clinics would set up in Ireland seeking business despite assurances from the Government that clinics would not be establishe­d if the amendment was repealed.

A silent protest against the huge march was mounted by about a dozen people, mainly women, outside the GPO as the marchers went past. A 21-year-old Dublin woman, who claimed she was a member of ‘Radical Queer Resist,’ said: “I’m not happy with people marching against my human rights.”

 ??  ?? PROTEST MARCH: Campaigner­s took to the streets of Dublin in their thousands calling on voters to retain the Eight Amendment on abortion. Photos: Mark Condren
PROTEST MARCH: Campaigner­s took to the streets of Dublin in their thousands calling on voters to retain the Eight Amendment on abortion. Photos: Mark Condren
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 ??  ?? OUTRAGED: Mattie McGrath fears set up of abortion clinics
OUTRAGED: Mattie McGrath fears set up of abortion clinics

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