The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Now Irish abortion laws will be more liberal than in UK

As Yes voters celebrate landslide victory for right to choose...

- By Jonathan Petre and Jake Hurfurt

IRELAND overturned its ban on abortion yesterday with a landslide vote that is set to make its laws even more liberal than those in Scotland, England and Wales.

In a landmark referendum, 66.4 per cent voted in favour of overhaulin­g the country’s restrictiv­e laws in what has been seen as a major blow to the authority of the once-dominant Catholic Church.

Thousands of Irish nationals flew in from around the world to participat­e, with campaigner­s including Call the Midwife’s Stephen McGann, comedian Dara O Briain and writer Marian Keyes tweeting their delight at the result.

Taoiseach Leo Varadkar, a leading advocate for the change, said: ‘What we have seen today is a culminatio­n of a quiet revolution that’s been taking place in Ireland.’

Campaigner­s who had gathered outside Dublin Castle to hear the result announced hugged and wept as the final counts were revealed. The size of the vote to overturn the abortion ban and its support among older voters confounded expectatio­ns of a close finish, and was hailed as a seismic change in a country that legalised same-sex marriage just three years ago.

It will now turn the spotlight across the border to Northern Ireland’s restrictiv­e laws. However, pro-life activists have vowed to fight to limit the reforms.

The vote strikes down the eighth amendment of the Irish constituti­on, which put the life of a mother and her baby on equal footing. Doctors could only carry out terminatio­ns when they felt the mother’s life was at risk. The Irish Govern- ment is expected to draw up legislatio­n to allow abortion on demand during the first 12 weeks of pregnancy – and abortions up to 24 weeks in cases posing a severe risk to the mother’s health. The changes mean Ireland’s laws are likely to be

‘The culminatio­n of a quiet revolution’

more liberal than those in Scotland, England and Wales, where two doctors must still agree that a woman’s mental or physical health is at risk.

Until now, Ireland has had some of the most draconian abortion laws in Europe, banning the procedure even in cases of rape, incest or fatal foetal abnormalit­ies. Previously anyone caught breaking the law risked up to 14 years in prison.

A 1983 referendum inserted the abortion ban into Ireland’s constituti­on, with support for the restrictio­ns then at a similar level to Friday’s vote to repeal.

Thousands of women have been forced to travel to the UK every year to end their unwanted pregnancie­s, which the pro-choice campaign argued was cruel.

 ??  ?? SEA CHANGE: An Irish woman weeps for joy after hearing the result yesterday
SEA CHANGE: An Irish woman weeps for joy after hearing the result yesterday

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