The Citizen (Gauteng)

Blasphemy OK in Ireland

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Dublin – Ireland has voted to lift a rarely enforced constituti­onal ban on blasphemy in the latest secular reform for the once staunchly Catholic country, referendum results show.

The ban was overturned with 65% of voters in favour, following recent votes to allow abortion and same-sex marriage.

“It has always been my view that there is no room for a provision such as this in our constituti­on,” Justice Minister Charlie Flanagan said. “Ireland is rightly proud of our reputation as a modern, liberal society.”

The referendum coincided with a presidenti­al election which saw incumbent Michael D Higgins win a landslide second term – securing a 56% vote share in a race of six candidates.

The 1937 blasphemy provision makes “matter that is grossly abusive or insulting in relation to matters held sacred by any religion” punishable by up to €25 000 (R415 000).

In practice, the legislatio­n is largely obsolete and there have been no successful prosecutio­ns since the state was establishe­d.

But it was heavily criticised in 2015 when police were forced to investigat­e British TV personalit­y Stephen Fry for branding God “stupid” during an interview.

Politician­s had long made it known that they intended to remove the provision and there have been claims the law gives support to more oppressive regimes on the global stage.

“The constituti­onal provision and Irish law on blasphemy gives comfort to countries where they have extremely draconian laws which are used to harass, to intimidate, to imprison, to subject people to violence,” Amnesty Ireland director Colm O’Gorman told AFP in an interview in the run-up to the referendum.

When the results were announced on Saturday night, only a handful of spectators were there to witness it – a stark contrast to May’s referendum, which saw vibrant celebratio­ns when the majority backed a campaign to end a ban on abortion.

Many saw that poll, which enjoyed a 64% turnout, as an indication of the Catholic Church’s waning grip on Irish life.

Friday’s vote saw a turnout of just 44%.

The re-election of Higgins, a 77-year-old former parliament­ary politician, academic and poet, was presented as a foregone conclusion for much of the campaign.

Higgins told a crowd gathered at Dublin Castle for the announceme­nt: “I will be a president for all the people – for those who voted for me and those who did not”.

Among his five challenger­s, businesspe­rson Peter Casey had a surprise surge in popularity, securing 23% of the vote.

Casey courted controvers­y in his campaign for comments over the Irish traveller community, drawing comparison­s in the Irish media to US President Donald Trump. –

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