Tag Archives: Repeal

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From top: Keep x Ad-Rock Ramos: Adam Horowitz

Adam Horowitz, a.k.a. Beastie Boy DJ Ad-Rock is launching his own line of runners early next year.

No shock announcement from a big music personality, until you read the blurb:

Made with nylon cordura — a vegan water-resistant material — the “Keep x Ad-Rock Ramos” shoes feature a midtop design, vegan shearling lining, synthetic down stuffing, and are embroidered with Ad-Rock’s name in magenta.

All profits made from the sneaker will be donated to health care organization Planned Parenthood.

“Net proceeds of this shoe will be donated to Planned Parenthood because I support a woman’s right to choose, and feel that women should not be punished for making decisions about their own lives and bodies,” Ad Rock says.

Available for pre-order for $97.

Perfect to accompany your REPEAL jumper.

FIGHT!

Any excuse

RAMOS Ad-Rock

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NO REPRO FEE 25/11/2016 Coalition to Repeal the Eighth Amendment hosted a Women Rising 2016 Rally today in Dublin. Pictured at the lunchtime rally ‘Women Rising in Solidarity 2016’ on Rosie Hackett Bridge, Dublin were, from left, Sarah Francis, Lucy Watmough, six-year-old Isis Pendergast and her mother Rachel. The rally was organised to demand that the Irish Government take action to respect and protect women’s lives, health and choices. Supporters were encouraged to wear black and tweet their support using #Black4Repeal. The rally is one of two Irish events that took place today (25.11.2016) as part of an international day of support for women in countries where abortion is banned or difficult to access. Some of the countries participating around the world include Brazil, Peru, Ecuador, Poland, Chile, Argentina, Mexico and Italy.  PHOTO: Mark Stedman

NO REPRO FEE 25/11/2016 Coalition to Repeal the Eighth Amendment hosted a Women Rising 2016 Rally today in Dublin. Pictured at the lunchtime rally ‘Women Rising in Solidarity 2016’ on Rosie Hackett Bridge are German students studying at Trinity College, Tara Knegt, left, and Theresa Henn. The two women found it amazing that is an issue in a country preceived to be as adavance socially as Ireland. The rally was organised to demand that the Irish Government take action to respect and protect women’s lives, health and choices. Supporters were encouraged to wear black and tweet their support using #Black4Repeal. The rally is one of two Irish events that took place today (25.11.2016) as part of an international day of support for women in countries where abortion is banned or difficult to access. Some of the countries participating around the world include Brazil, Peru, Ecuador, Poland, Chile, Argentina, Mexico and Italy.  PHOTO: Mark Stedman

NO REPRO FEE 25/11/2016 Coalition to Repeal the Eighth Amendment hosted a Women Rising 2016 Rally today in Dublin. The lunchtime rally ‘Women Rising in Solidarity 2016’ on Rosie Hackett Bridge. The rally was organised to demand that the Irish Government take action to respect and protect women’s lives, health and choices. Supporters were encouraged to wear black and tweet their support using #Black4Repeal. The rally is one of two Irish events that took place today (25.11.2016) as part of an international day of support for women in countries where abortion is banned or difficult to access. Some of the countries participating around the world include Brazil, Peru, Ecuador, Poland, Chile, Argentina, Mexico and Italy.  PHOTO: Mark Stedman

NO REPRO FEE 25/11/2016 Coalition to Repeal the Eighth Amendment hosted a Women Rising 2016 Rally today in Dublin. Pictured at the lunchtime rally ‘Women Rising in Solidarity 2016’ on Rosie Hackett Bridge, Dublin was six-year-old Isis Pendergast and her mother Rachel, left. The rally was organised to demand that the Irish Government take action to respect and protect women’s lives, health and choices. Supporters were encouraged to wear black and tweet their support using #Black4Repeal. The rally is one of two Irish events that took place today (25.11.2016) as part of an international day of support for women in countries where abortion is banned or difficult to access. Some of the countries participating around the world include Brazil, Peru, Ecuador, Poland, Chile, Argentina, Mexico and Italy.  PHOTO: Mark Stedman

NO REPRO FEE 25/11/2016 Coalition to Repeal the Eighth Amendment hosted a Women Rising 2016 Rally today in Dublin. Pictured at the lunchtime rally ‘Women Rising in Solidarity 2016’ on Rosie Hackett Bridge, Dublin was Trinity College Dublin student Stacey Wrenn from Limerick. The rally was organised to demand that the Irish Government take action to respect and protect women’s lives, health and choices. Supporters were encouraged to wear black and tweet their support using #Black4Repeal. The rally is one of two Irish events that took place today (25.11.2016) as part of an international day of support for women in countries where abortion is banned or difficult to access. Some of the countries participating around the world include Brazil, Peru, Ecuador, Poland, Chile, Argentina, Mexico and Italy.  PHOTO: Mark Stedman

This afternoon.

Scenes from today’s Women Rising rally in Dublin, arranged by Coalition to Repeal the 8th, taken by Mark Stedman.

Mark writes:

The rally was organised to demand that the Irish Government take action to respect and protect women’s lives, health and choices. Supporters were encouraged to wear black and tweet their support using #Black4Repeal.

The rally is one of two Irish events that took place today as part of an international day of support for women in countries where abortion is banned or difficult to access. Some of the countries participating around the world include Brazil, Peru, Ecuador, Poland, Chile, Argentina, Mexico and Italy.

Coalition to Repeal the 8th

Mark Stedman

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Savita Halappavanar

Today marks the fourth anniversary of the death of Savita Halappavanar.

Miscarrying and denied a termination for medical reasons on grounds of legality, Savita’s requests to Galway Maternity Hospital were met with the now-infamous refrain of “this is a Catholic country”.

The following four years saw initial outrage at her treatment solidify into a sustained pro-choice movement, mobilising and campaigning with increasing visibility for a repeal of the Eighth Amendment.

Sinéad Redmond, of AIMS Ireland, writes:

Savita Halappanavar died on this day 4 years ago in Galway University Hospital. She died in suffering and in pain, because she was pregnant, having been denied basic medical care she and her husband Praveen repeatedly requested.

She died because abortion is illegal in nearly all circumstances in Ireland and even now remains so; but she also died because she was a pregnant migrant woman and a woman of colour in Ireland. Migrant women are twice as likely to die in pregnancy in Ireland as women born in Ireland and the UK.

Nora Hyland, Bimbo Onanuga, and Dhara Kivlehan are all names of migrant women who’ve died in or after pregnancy in recent years in Irish maternity hospitals who should be alive now with their children. Only a few months ago Malak Thawley died in an operating theatre of the NMH after basic surgical equipment “could not be found” to stop her bleeding to death.

Our maternity service is not a sufficiently safe place for migrant women, Traveller women, and women of colour; the denial of access to abortion in it only renders it more so, as demonstrated most recently and horrendously with the barbarities the Irish state perpetrated upon Ms Y.

I remember #Savita and I remember the tears I cried for her on hearing how she was left to die unnecessarily. I remember Bimbo and how she was told she was exaggerating the pain which was a symptom of the uterine rupture she later died of, and how it took her partner and AIMS Ireland THREE YEARS of fighting to even get an inquest opened into her death.

I remember Nora Hyland and how she died of a massive cardiac event after waiting over 40 minutes for a blood transfusion that never came, and with three times the recommended dose of Syntometrine in her body, a component of which is known to have adverse cardiac effects.

I remember Dhara Kivlehan and how her doctor told her husband as she went undiagnosed of a fatal liver disorder that it was harder to diagnose Indian people with jaundice, a key indicator of liver failure.

I remember all these women, their partners, and their families and how they were not only mistreated appallingly by the Irish maternity system in life, not permitted as pregnant women to have the final say on their own bodies because of the existence of the 8th amendment, and how further indignity and injury was heaped upon their grieving families by the Irish state and maternity hospitals in refusing to address properly the causes of their death, apologise for them or treat their partners with the respect they deserved.

I remember and I fight for change that sometimes seems as though it will never come, especially on days like today where the darkness closes in early and the memory of the horror and outrage and grief of 4 years ago weighs heavily on me. But I do fight.

Solidarity and love to those of you who fight with me, those of you who’ve fought for years and decades longer than me, and those of you who’ve seen more suffering caused by Irish law and Irish maternity hospitals than I can imagine. We will remember and we will bring about change.

I said this last year, and the year before; I say it again this year, and will every year until everyone in Ireland with a womb owns their own body.

Meanwhile…

A candlelit vigil for Savita will happen at the Spanish Arch in Galway at 6pm this evening.

AIMS Ireland