Ireland
to hold abortion referendum at the end of May
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[January 30, 2018] By
Padraic Halpin
DUBLIN (Reuters) - Ireland's government on
Monday proposed holding a referendum to liberalize the country's
abortion regime at the end of May, offering voters the first opportunity
in 35 years to overhaul some of the world's strictest laws.
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Abortion has long been a divisive issue in once stridently Catholic
Ireland, which has witnessed a wave of social change in recent
years. It became the first country in the world to adopt gay
marriage by popular vote in 2015.
Voters will be asked if they wish to repeal the eighth amendment of
the constitution that was inserted in 1983 and enshrined the equal
right to life of the mother and her unborn child, and to instead
enable parliament to set the laws.
While not on the ballot paper, Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said his
government would begin drafting legislation in line with the
recommendations made by an all-party parliamentary committee last
month, which called for terminations with no restrictions to be
allowed up to 12 weeks into a pregnancy.
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"We already have abortion in Ireland but it's unsafe, unregulated
and unlawful and in my opinion we cannot continue to export our
problems and import our solutions," Varadkar told a news conference,
referring to the thousands of women who travel abroad or use
abortion pills to end their pregnancies each year.
"I believe that this is a decision about whether we want to continue
to stigmatize and criminalize our sisters, our co-workers and our
friends or whether we are prepared to take a collective act of
leadership to show empathy and compassion," said Varadkar, who will
campaign for the laws to change.
A complete ban on abortion was lifted in Ireland in 2013 when
terminations were allowed in cases where the mother's life was in
danger. The debate around that change elicited street protests from
both sides and a heated debate is expected in the coming months.
Two opinion polls in recent days found that between 51 percent and
56 percent of voters would support a proposal to allow abortion up
to 12 weeks into a pregnancy, with just under 30 percent opposed and
the rest undecided.
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However, the polls showed a sharp generational divide with a clear
majority of voters over 65 opposed. Analysts have said that those
against the proposal are more likely to actually vote and that many
of the undecided voters are likely to oppose the changes.
For those reasons, pro-choice activists have been pressuring the
government to hold the referendum in May to maximize the number of
students who can vote before many leave to spend the summer months
traveling or working overseas.
Nobody under the age of 50 has voted on comprehensive abortion
reforms in Ireland. Its 39-year-old leader was not old enough to
cast a ballot when a referendum was passed in 1992 to allow women
the right to obtain information and travel abroad for a termination.
A date is expected to be finalised in the coming weeks.
"I know this will be a difficult decision for the Irish people to
make. It is a very personal and private issue and for most of us
it's not a black and white issue, it is one that is grey," Varadkar
said.
"If it is approved, and I believe it will be approved, it will say
that as a country we have come of age."
(Reporting by Padraic Halpin; Editing by Susan Thomas)
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