Stabroek News Sunday

Thousands in U.S. march under 'Ban Off Our Bodies' banner for abortion rights

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - Thousands of abortion rights supporters rallied across the United States yesterday, angered by the prospect that the Supreme Court may soon overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion nationwide a half century ago.

The protests kicked off what organizers predict will be a "summer of rage" ignited by the May 2 disclosure of a draft opinion showing the court's conservati­ve majority ready to reverse the 1973 ruling that establishe­d a woman's constituti­onal right to terminate her pregnancy.

The court's final ruling, which could return the power to ban abortion to state legislatur­es, is expected in June. About half of the 50 states are poised to ban or severely restrict abortion almost immediatel­y should Roe be struck down.

"If you can't choose whether you want to have a baby, if that's not a fundamenta­l right, then I don't know what is," said Brita Van Rossum, 62, a landscape designer who traveled from suburban Philadelph­ia to join the abortion-rights rally in the nation's capital, her first ever.

Protesters marching under the slogan "Bans Off Our Bodies" took to the streets from New York and Atlanta to Chicago and Los Angeles in a show of outrage that Democrats hope will help galvanize support for their party and blunt projected Republican gains in the November elections.

The day's largest demonstrat­ion unfolded in Washington, where a crowd that organizers estimated at 20,000 people massed at the Washington Monument and braved a light drizzle to march along the National Mall past the U.S. Capitol to the Supreme Court itself.

The rally erupted in shouts of "Shame" and "Bans off our bodies" as the marchers neared the marbled columns of the courthouse.

Surrounded by police was a group of a few dozen counter-demonstrat­ors holding signs that read: "End abortion violence" and "Women's rights begin in the womb."

The encounter between the two sides grew tense at times.

 ?? 2022. REUTERS/Leah Millis ?? Abortion-rights protester Grace Lillis participat­es in nationwide pro-abortion rights demonstrat­ions following the leaked Supreme Court opinion suggesting the possibilit­y of overturnin­g the Roe v. Wade abortion rights decision, in Washington, U.S., May 14,
2022. REUTERS/Leah Millis Abortion-rights protester Grace Lillis participat­es in nationwide pro-abortion rights demonstrat­ions following the leaked Supreme Court opinion suggesting the possibilit­y of overturnin­g the Roe v. Wade abortion rights decision, in Washington, U.S., May 14,

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