Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Ireland tipped to repeal abortion ban by a landslide

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DUBLIN, May 26 ( AFP) - Traditiona­lly Catholic Ireland looks set to “make history” by liberalisi­ng some of the strictest abortion laws in Europe, the PM said, as votes in the hardfought referendum were counted Saturday. The campaign to repeal a ban was predicted to win by a two- thirds majority, with an Irish Times poll of 4,000 saying the “Yes” camp was leading by 68 percent to 32 percent.

“Thank you to everyone who voted today. Democracy in action. It's looking like we will make history tomorrow,” PM Leo Varadkar, who backs the reform, said in a tweet. The Irish Times survey suggested that women voted by 70 percent in favour of the proposal and 30 percent against. Support among men was 65 percent prochoice and 35 percent anti-abortion.

People over 65, however, voted mostly against overhaulin­g the current legislatio­n, which only allows terminatio­ns in cases where the mother's life is in danger. Among the youngest voters, 18 to 24-year-olds, the poll found that 87 percent of respondent­s voted to allow abortion. The exit poll showed “an overwhelmi­ng desire for change that nobody has foreseen”, wrote Irish Times deputy political editor Fiach Kelly. “The victory for the 'Yes' campaign looks set to be neither narrow nor based on a few segments of Irish society. Rather, it will be carried high on the shoulders of a majority across the entire country,” he said. Kelly pointed out that in the Connacht-Ulster constituen­cy, traditiona­lly seen as the most conservati­ve region in the country, the exit poll indicated that 59 percent voted for change. He called it “the final casting off of old mores”.

Nearly 3.5 million voters were asked whether they wanted to overturn the ban after an emotional and divisive campaign. Results for different parts of the country are expected from 1100 GMT, with a final result to be announced later in the day at the main counting centre in Dublin Castle.

“Will sleep tonight in the hope of waking up to a country that is more compassion­ate, more caring and more respectful,” Irish health minister Simon Harris wrote on Twitter. People arriving at polling stations from the early morning spoke about the momentousn­ess of a complex decision that in many cases pitted moral against religious beliefs.

At present, Ireland's eighth amendment -- which could be repealed in the vote -- recognises the “right to life of the unborn” with an “equal right to life of the mother”. The eighth amendment to the Irish constituti­on was installed following a 1983 referendum that approved outlawing abortion. Anyone terminatin­g a pregnancy in Ireland currently faces up to 14 years in jail.

The ban has led to thousands of women travelling each year to neighbouri­ng 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.

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

 ??  ?? Rossi Maloney, aged 2, who featured as a 'No' campaign poster child after his mother Emma Maloney credits the 8th Amendment for saving his life after an unplanned pregnancy, holds a Pro-Life poster ahead of a referendum on abortion law, in Dublin,...
Rossi Maloney, aged 2, who featured as a 'No' campaign poster child after his mother Emma Maloney credits the 8th Amendment for saving his life after an unplanned pregnancy, holds a Pro-Life poster ahead of a referendum on abortion law, in Dublin,...

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