"No More Stigma", Says Irish PM As Country Votes To Overturn Abortion Ban

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Leo Varadkar said Ireland would now provide compassion and medical care for women in crisis pregnancies.London: 
Ireland on Saturday voted to erase the stigma and burden of shame from hundreds of thousands of women who secretly had abortions, Prime
Minister Leo Varadkar said.Speaking after a landslide referendum in favour of repealing the republic's ban on abortions, Varadkar said
Ireland had emerged from the shadows and come of age."Today is an historic day for Ireland
A quiet revolution has taken place," he said in a speech at Dublin Castle, where the referendum result was declared, showing 66 percent had
voted to repeal the constitutional ban on abortions."We as a people have spoken
And we say that we trust women and we respect women and their decisions."No more doctors telling their patients there is nothing that can be
done for them in their own country
No more lonely journeys across the Irish Sea."No more stigma
The veil of secrecy is lifted
No more isolation
The burden of shame is gone.Varadkar, 39, was given a rock star welcome by cheering crowds packed into the castle forecourt to hear the
final result of the referendum.He said Ireland would now provide compassion and medical care for women in crisis pregnancies instead of
turning a blind eye.He told No voters feeling cut adrift that Ireland was the same country they knew, "just a little more tolerant, open and
respectful".Wrenching pain' of mistreatmentIreland's constitution was amended in 1983 to ban abortions
Saturday's referendum result will likely see the amendment repealed before the year is out."For 35 years we have hidden the reality of
crisis pregnancies behind our laws
We have hidden our conscience behind the constitution," said Varadkar."This majority decision changes all that."He said Saturday would be
remembered as the day that historically deeply socially conservative Ireland "stepped out from under the last of our shadows and into the
light."The day we came of age as a country
The day we took our place among the nations of the world."He ended his speech saying: "The wrenching pain of decades of mistreatment of
Irish women cannot be unlived
However, today we have ensured that it does not have to be lived again."Varadkar, Ireland's first gay prime minister, came to power last
year in what was seen as another major milestone for diversity in Ireland
He took over as leader of the centre-right Fine Gael party, leading a minority government.Born to an Indian father and an Irish mother,
Varadkar was a hospital doctor before becoming a family doctor in 2010.He changed his position on abortion after hearing of two particular
cases during his time as health minister from 2014 to 2016, which convinced him terminations should not be banned in the Irish
constitution.As he left Dublin Castle, he stopped for selfies and chatted with the handful of Yes-supporters still in the forecourt.(Except
for the headline, this story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)