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Abortion

Protest over Roe v Wade ruling held at US embassy in Dublin

The crowd was told about how the US can learn from Ireland’s 2018 movement to repeal the Eighth Amendment and liberalise its abortion laws.

PROTESTERS GATHERED AT the United States embassy in Dublin in a demonstration over the removal of the constitutional right to abortion in the US.

The US Supreme Court ruling, handed down on Friday, ended constitutional protections for abortion that had been in place for nearly 50 years by deciding to overturn the landmark Roe v Wade ruling.

It is expected to lead to abortion bans in roughly half of US states.

A protest held at the US embassy in Dublin today heard speeches from activists about how the US can learn from Ireland’s 2018 referendum to repeal the Eighth Amendment and liberalise its abortion laws.

People Before Profit TD Brid Smith compared the restrictions on abortion laws to gun regulations in the US.

“It’s alright to control women’s bodies but don’t control access to guns,” she said.

“I have no doubt that that ruling will embolden the anti-choicers in this country and elsewhere. We still have a way to go.

“Repeal was a massive victory, it was won from below by people power throughout this country over many years,” she said, adding that better access to abortion was still needed in Ireland.

“Watch this space: the right wing in Dail Eireann, and outside Dail Eireann, will try to chip away at meagre access.”

Sinead Kennedy, of the Action for Choice group, told those who had gathered that after decades of solidarity from people in the US and around the world over Ireland’s strict abortion laws, “it was time that we paid that back”.

“We’ve seen this disgusting judgement that basically has said that women and pregnant people are now second-class citizens in the United States.

“This flies in the face of one of the core things that we’ve come to realise in the last decade – that control over your own body, over your own person is one of the core and fundamental rights.

“You cannot exist as a free human being in this society without that fundamental right.

“This is not 1973, it’s not the 1950s, there are reasons to be optimistic,” she said.

“We have seen inspiring, powerful social movements: the Me Too movement, Black Lives Matter, the wave of unionisation that is taking place in the United States.

“There is the example of Ireland… We can see what a grassroots movement can achieve. We learned the lesson not to look to the courts, not to look to so-called enlightened politicians, that we will fight for our rights.”

Ailbhe Smyth, a feminist and LGBT rights activist, told the crowd that the ruling was “a mockery of freedom, a mockery of justice, a mockery of equality for women”.

“What we saw the unelected members of the Supreme Court of the United States of America, what we saw them do and declare the other day in their ruling on Roe v Wade was to declare a war on women.

“This is incredibly, incredibly serious. We talk about this as being a rollback. It is not a rollback of one law or one right, this is a rollback in the way in which the whole democracy of the United States of America works.

“Everywhere across the world, we have to be those who stand in absolute solidarity with the many people in the US… who are every bit as disgusted.

“I think of the distress, I think of the suffering, I think of the anxiety, the anguish that so many people are experiencing as we stand here outside the US embassy.

“I hope they’re listening to what we’re saying, because no country should ever condemn women or anyone to those levels of suffering and anguish,” she said.

Speaking on RTE programme The Week In Politics, Minister of State Mary Butler said that the issue is a “very, very divisive” one and it will continue to be debated in the US.

Butler campaigned for a No vote in the referendum on whether to repeal the Eighth Amendment.

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