40 arrested for protesting against Obama
40 arrested for protesting against Obama
The protest was staged to oppose Obama's support for abortion rights.

South Bend (Indiana): Nearly 40 people were arrested on Sunday as they tried to enter the University of Notre Dame to protest President Barack Obama's appearance at commencement, police said.

At least 39 people were taken into custody on trespassing charges, police Sgt Bill Redman said. Among those arrested were Norma McCorvey, the plaintiff identified as "Roe" in the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision that legalised abortion. She now opposes abortion.

Obama's commencement speech capped weeks of protests at the most prominent US Roman Catholic university.

Critics have condemned the university's decision to invite Obama, who supports abortion rights and embryonic stem-cell research, and some have called for the resignation of the univeristy's president, Rev John Jenkins.

In his introduction for Obama, Jenkins reiterated the school's support for the church's teaching on the sanctity of human life but applauded Obama for coming to the school.

"Others might have avoided this venue for that reason, but President Obama is not someone who stops talking to those who differ with him," he said.

Obama thanked graduates for their "maturity and responsibility," acknowledging that his appearance "has not been without controversy".

Hundreds of people attended an outdoor Mass and rally on campus, while students who decided not to attend the commencement went elsewhere on campus for prayer. Students opposing the Obama invitation had urged peaceful protests.

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A philosophy graduate, Victor Saenz from Mexicali, Mexico, said attending the ceremony "was something I just couldn't do" because he believed Obama's invitation violated a 2004 statement adopted by US bishops saying Catholic institutions should not honour those who don't adhere to church teachings.

In his commencement appearance, Obama, a former law professor, also received an honorary law degree.

Bishop John D'Arcy, whose diocese includes Notre Dame, joined the rally and called students "heroes" for expressing their anger over the invitation to Obama.

Some students who attended the rally carried signs declaring "Shame on Notre Dame" and "Stop Abortion Now." Many wore anti-abortion T-shirts, one of which depicted a leprechaun (the school mascot) throwing a baby into a trash can and the words "May 17, 2009, The day the dome was forever tarnished," which referred to the school's famed golden dome.

A New York City resident and a member of the abortion-rights group Abortion on Demand,Sunsara Taylor, said outside the school's gates that "there was a voice missing" in the controversy over Obama's visit.

"If women don't have a right to decide if they have a child, women aren't free," she added. "We need to expand abortion access and abortion rights and lift the stigma. Fetuses are not babies and women are not incubators."

School spokesman Dennis Brown said most of the arrests on Sunday were at the school's front gate, where most of the protesters angered by Obama's campus appearance had gathered.

He also said three people were ejected from the commencement venue after shouting anti-abortion slogans during Obama's speech.

Kathleen Hession, a graduate from Iowa City, Iowa, said after the ceremony that the protests have overshadowed the students' academic achievements.

"This is our graduation, and it's neither the time nor the place to stage something like that," she said. "I respect their beliefs, but it's not the right platform."

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