Voters will be asked on Friday if they wish to repeal a
constitutional amendment inserted following a 1983 referendum that
enshrined the equal right to life of the mother and her unborn
child, and to enable parliament to set the laws.
Some politicians appealing for a 'No' vote have suggested in recent
days that if the referendum fails, the constitution could instead be
amended again to allow for abortions in cases such as rape, incest
and fatal foetal abnormality.
A complete ban was lifted in Ireland five years ago for cases where
the mother's life is in danger.
"What I see now in the final days of this campaign is a tactic by
the 'No' campaign to try and make out that there is some sort of
alternative amendment that we could put into our constitution,"
Varadkar, who is campaigning for a 'Yes' vote, told parliament.
"I would ask those people 30 years after that amendment was put into
our constitution, why has nobody put forward an alternative that
would deal with all these hard cases? Why only three days from the
vote are people only suddenly raising that?"
"It's not a realistic alternative. It is just a tactic and I believe
the Irish people will see through that."
While not on the ballot paper, much of the campaign has focused on
the legislation Varadkar intends to bring forward if the referendum
is carried, which calls for terminations with no restrictions to be
allowed up to 12 weeks into a pregnancy.
[to top of second column] |
That was in line with recommendations made by an all-party
parliamentary committee, which came to a more liberal position than
some had anticipated after concluding that legislating for
termination for reasons of rape and incest was too complex.
The leaders of Fianna Fail and Sinn Fein, the two largest opposition
parties, backed Varadkar in saying amending the constitution for
such cases was impossible.
However 'No' campaigners, which include more than half of the Fianna
Fail parliamentary party, say the government's proposals go too far.
"The government has used difficult, tragic cases to push through
extreme abortion on demand. This is why people are increasingly
voting "NO" to abortion this Friday," Clare McCarthy, a spokeswoman
for the LoveBoth group said in a statement.
Opinion polls have put those who favor liberalizing one of the
world's most restrictive regimes in a clear lead and while there has
been some tightening in the margin, two surveys on Sunday showed the
'Yes' side pulling further ahead.
(Reporting by Padraic Halpin; Editing by Alison Williams)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |