Relax laws on abortion, Northern Ireland tells British PM
BELFAST: Hundreds of women’s rights activist rallied in Belfast to put pressure on British Prime Minister Theresa May to reform Northern Ireland’s highly restrictive abortion rules after neighbouring Ireland’s vote to liberalise its laws.
Voters in Ireland on Friday backed the removal of a constitutional abortion ban by two-to-one.
That leaves British-ruled Northern Ireland as the only part of the British Isles with a restrictive abortion regime, and May on Sunday faced calls from within her cabinet and the opposition to scrap Northern Ireland’s strict rules.
A spokesman for May said on Sunday changing the rules should only be undertaken by a government in Northern Ireland.
The province, divided between unionists who favour continued British rule and nationalists who want to unify with Ireland, has had no devolved regional government since January last year after a power-sharing agreement collapsed between the two communities’ main parties.
Activists gathered outside Belfast City Hall carrying placards emblazoned with messages such as “I am not a vessel” and “Mind Your Own Uterus”.
They said it was May’s responsibility to act. “1, 2, 3, 4, we wont’ be silenced any more,” the crowd chanted. 5, 6, 7, 8, it’s time for May to legislate.”
Abortion is permitted in Northern Ireland only if a woman’s life is at risk or there is a risk to her mental or physical health that is long-term or permanent.
It is not permitted in cases of rape, incest or fatal foetal abnormality.
Both Northern Ireland’s mainly unionist Protestants and its mainly nationalist Catholics tend to be more socially conservative than elsewhere in Ireland or Britain. — Reuters