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Campaign for Ireland abortion referendum turns testy

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Posters for and against abortion are plastered all across Ireland as the campaign ahead of a historic referendum Friday in this mainly Catholic nation turns increasingly testy in its final days.

Voters head to the polls to decide whether to repeal a constitutional ban on all abortions except in cases where the mother's life is at risk.

Recent opinion polls have put the "Yes" camp ahead, but its lead has narrowed in some surveys, while around one in six people remain undecided.

"The depth of feeling on both sides has been very apparent," Diarmaid Ferriter, lecturer in modern Irish history at University College Dublin, told AFP.

The referendum comes three years after Ireland backed legalising same-sex marriage by a landslide -- a seismic change for the once devout country.

Ferriter said that while the run-up to the 2015 vote was "positive and uplifting", the campaign ahead of the abortion poll was "much more visceral and deep-rooted".

- Abortion case went to UN -

A 1983 referendum approved outlawing abortion by a wide margin, but on a turnout of just over half the voting population.

Subsequent legislation ruled anyone having an abortion could face up to 14 years in jail.

A billboard urges a 'No' vote in Friday's referendum on allowing abortion  currently ...
A billboard urges a 'No' vote in Friday's referendum on allowing abortion, currently banned in most instances in mainly Roman Catholic Ireland
Artur Widak, AFP

The law has led to thousands of women travelling each year to Britain where abortion is legal.

It was tweaked in 2013 to allow terminations if the mother's life is at risk, following public outrage at the death of Savita Halappanavar, a pregnant woman originally from India who was refused an abortion.

Impetus for the new ballot also came from the case of Amanda Mellet, who was forced to travel to Britain for an abortion after she suffered fatal foetal abnormality.

Mellet took her case to the UN's Human Rights Committee, which ruled that denying her a termination in Ireland was a denial of human rights.

The Irish government offered her 30,000 euros ($35,000) in compensation -- further spurring calls for reform.

Proposed legislation to follow any repeal would allow unrestricted abortions up to 12 weeks, with some exceptions up to six months in certain defined circumstances.

- 'Join the rebellion' -

Months of campaigning has become increasingly testy.

Earlier this month Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, who backs the "Yes" campaign, denounced the pro-life lobby for using images of people with Down Syndrome and suggesting repeal would lead to terminations of babies with the genetic disorder.

Opinion is sharply divided as reflected in competing 'Yes' and 'No' posters ahea...
Opinion is sharply divided as reflected in competing 'Yes' and 'No' posters ahead of Ireland's abortion referendum on Friday
Artur Widak, AFP

Television debates have been criticised for descending into point-scoring, while medical professionals taking a stance have been assailed.

"No" campaigners have claimed a biased liberal mainstream media is in cahoots with the "Yes" lobby and, with a majority of Irish MPs backing repeal, they pit themselves as anti-establishment with the slogan: "Join the rebellion".

Decisions by tech titans Google and Facebook to halt referendum adverts reinforced their suspicions of being silenced in a "rigged" vote.

Meanwhile the Catholic Church has largely taken a back seat in the campaign -- mindful, according to experts, that an overly dogmatic approach could have the reverse effect of encouraging a pro-abortion vote.

According to a 2016 census 78 percent of Ireland's 3.7 million people declared themselves Catholic, but numbers attending weekly mass have been steadily falling.

- Hashtag campaigns -

Ferriter noted the Church's stance is one of several contrasts with 1983, when it played a far more prominent role.

"I think the debate back then was dominated by a lot of older voices and a lot of male voices, and the Church was obviously in a much more powerful position than it is today," he said.

"There's a much younger profile to the campaigners on both sides."

Youthful activists from both sides have hit the streets and social networks to mobilise the divided electorate.

The "Yes" campaign successfully promoted various hashtags including one -- #hometovote -- encouraging overseas voters to return for the poll.

Bursaries have been set up at universities in Cambridge, Oxford, London and Nottingham in England to help Irish students fly home for the vote.

They also harnessed popular stars, including actors Saoirse Ronan, Andrew Scott and Liam Cunningham.

Young voices opposing repeal have featured too.

Katie Ascough, a UCD student, helped spearhead a secular campaign utilising the hashtag #OurFuture. One of the anti-abortion campaigns uses the simple slogan "Love Both".

Sociologist Ethel Crowley, a specialist on rural Ireland, believes repeal will win -- thanks to the young.

"I think age is a bigger factor than where you live, with older folks finding it more difficult to escape the clutches of Catholic thinking," she said.

Posters for and against abortion are plastered all across Ireland as the campaign ahead of a historic referendum Friday in this mainly Catholic nation turns increasingly testy in its final days.

Voters head to the polls to decide whether to repeal a constitutional ban on all abortions except in cases where the mother’s life is at risk.

Recent opinion polls have put the “Yes” camp ahead, but its lead has narrowed in some surveys, while around one in six people remain undecided.

“The depth of feeling on both sides has been very apparent,” Diarmaid Ferriter, lecturer in modern Irish history at University College Dublin, told AFP.

The referendum comes three years after Ireland backed legalising same-sex marriage by a landslide — a seismic change for the once devout country.

Ferriter said that while the run-up to the 2015 vote was “positive and uplifting”, the campaign ahead of the abortion poll was “much more visceral and deep-rooted”.

– Abortion case went to UN –

A 1983 referendum approved outlawing abortion by a wide margin, but on a turnout of just over half the voting population.

Subsequent legislation ruled anyone having an abortion could face up to 14 years in jail.

A billboard urges a 'No' vote in Friday's referendum on allowing abortion  currently ...

A billboard urges a 'No' vote in Friday's referendum on allowing abortion, currently banned in most instances in mainly Roman Catholic Ireland
Artur Widak, AFP

The law has led to thousands of women travelling each year to Britain where abortion is legal.

It was tweaked in 2013 to allow terminations if the mother’s life is at risk, following public outrage at the death of Savita Halappanavar, a pregnant woman originally from India who was refused an abortion.

Impetus for the new ballot also came from the case of Amanda Mellet, who was forced to travel to Britain for an abortion after she suffered fatal foetal abnormality.

Mellet took her case to the UN’s Human Rights Committee, which ruled that denying her a termination in Ireland was a denial of human rights.

The Irish government offered her 30,000 euros ($35,000) in compensation — further spurring calls for reform.

Proposed legislation to follow any repeal would allow unrestricted abortions up to 12 weeks, with some exceptions up to six months in certain defined circumstances.

– ‘Join the rebellion’ –

Months of campaigning has become increasingly testy.

Earlier this month Prime Minister Leo Varadkar, who backs the “Yes” campaign, denounced the pro-life lobby for using images of people with Down Syndrome and suggesting repeal would lead to terminations of babies with the genetic disorder.

Opinion is sharply divided as reflected in competing 'Yes' and 'No' posters ahea...

Opinion is sharply divided as reflected in competing 'Yes' and 'No' posters ahead of Ireland's abortion referendum on Friday
Artur Widak, AFP

Television debates have been criticised for descending into point-scoring, while medical professionals taking a stance have been assailed.

“No” campaigners have claimed a biased liberal mainstream media is in cahoots with the “Yes” lobby and, with a majority of Irish MPs backing repeal, they pit themselves as anti-establishment with the slogan: “Join the rebellion”.

Decisions by tech titans Google and Facebook to halt referendum adverts reinforced their suspicions of being silenced in a “rigged” vote.

Meanwhile the Catholic Church has largely taken a back seat in the campaign — mindful, according to experts, that an overly dogmatic approach could have the reverse effect of encouraging a pro-abortion vote.

According to a 2016 census 78 percent of Ireland’s 3.7 million people declared themselves Catholic, but numbers attending weekly mass have been steadily falling.

– Hashtag campaigns –

Ferriter noted the Church’s stance is one of several contrasts with 1983, when it played a far more prominent role.

“I think the debate back then was dominated by a lot of older voices and a lot of male voices, and the Church was obviously in a much more powerful position than it is today,” he said.

“There’s a much younger profile to the campaigners on both sides.”

Youthful activists from both sides have hit the streets and social networks to mobilise the divided electorate.

The “Yes” campaign successfully promoted various hashtags including one — #hometovote — encouraging overseas voters to return for the poll.

Bursaries have been set up at universities in Cambridge, Oxford, London and Nottingham in England to help Irish students fly home for the vote.

They also harnessed popular stars, including actors Saoirse Ronan, Andrew Scott and Liam Cunningham.

Young voices opposing repeal have featured too.

Katie Ascough, a UCD student, helped spearhead a secular campaign utilising the hashtag #OurFuture. One of the anti-abortion campaigns uses the simple slogan “Love Both”.

Sociologist Ethel Crowley, a specialist on rural Ireland, believes repeal will win — thanks to the young.

“I think age is a bigger factor than where you live, with older folks finding it more difficult to escape the clutches of Catholic thinking,” she said.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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