The Manila Times

Ireland votes in historic abortion referendum

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DUBLIN: Irish voters headed to the polls on Friday to vote in a landmark referendum on whether the traditiona­lly Catholic country should liberalize some of the strictest abortion laws in Europe.

The campaign has dominated public debate in Ireland over recent months and has forced its nearly 3.5 million voters to decide if the constituti­onal ban on abortion should stay or go.

Opinion polls have suggested the result could be close, with large numbers of undecided voters hanging in the balance.

Ireland was traditiona­lly one of the most religious countries in Europe.

- ence has waned in recent years following a series of child sex abuse scandals.

The referendum comes three years after Ireland voted to legalize samesex marriage, in a seismic change for the EU nation.

Voters have until 10 p. m. ( 2000 GMT) on Friday to cast their ballots. The count will begin at 9 a. m. on Saturday, with the result expected to be announced at Dublin Castle later in the day.

Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, who backs the reform, was due to cast his ballot at 10:30 a.m. in Dublin.

Early votes on remote isles

Voters on 12 remote islands in the Atlantic Ocean went to the polls a day early on Thursday to ensure the ballot

count centers on the mainland in case of poor weather.

After voters on Gola—total electorate 29— off the Donegal northwest coast cast their ballots, the sealed ballot box was taken back to the mainland on a 10-minute ferry ride by

The eighth amendment to the Irish constituti­on was installed following a 1983 referendum which approved outlawing abortion.

Subsequent legislatio­n ruled anyone having an abortion could face up to 14 years in jail.

The ban has led to thousands of women traveling each year to neighborin­g Britain where terminatio­ns are legal, or increasing­ly turning to abortion pills sold online.

The law was tweaked in 2013 to allow terminatio­ns if the mother’s life is at risk, following the death of Savita Halappanav­ar, a pregnant woman originally from India who was refused an abortion.

The Irish government has proposed that if the eighth amendment is repealed, abortion will be allowed up to 12 weeks and between 12 and 24 weeks in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces.

Split views

The debate has split the country.

Gavin Boyne, 20, a philosophy student wearing a pink hoodie from the Love Both pro- life movement, said he owed his life to the eighth amendment.

His mother had accidental­ly got pregnant and had been sent to England by her parents for a terminatio­n, before they had a change of heart.

“My grandparen­ts recognized that I was a unique human being with value and so they couldn’t have had me killed. If the eighth amendment wasn’t there in 1998, I wouldn’t be here today,” he said.

Meanwhile Ciara Grealy, 21, from Dublin, said: “I don’t know why we should export women to another country to have something that should be done safely and legally here.

“One of my best friends had to do it. She found out she was pregnant; the doctors said ‘our hands are tied’.

with her parents.” She said her friend had found seeing the omnipresen­t referendum placards distressin­g.

votes on Thursday, attempting to convince wavering voters in what has been an emotionall­y charged campaign.

Meanwhile city streets are filled with people wearing campaign badges, stickers and tops.

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