'Handmaid's tale' protest at US Ohio abortion bill

Jo Ingles, Ohio Public Radio/TV Statehouse News Handmaid's Tale ant-abortion protesters in Ohio (13 June 2017)Jo Ingles, Ohio Public Radio/TV Statehouse News
The Handmaid's Tale has inspired several protests in the US this year

Activists in the US state of Ohio have been inspired by The Handmaid's Tale in their protest against a bill placing more restrictions on abortion.

Several women held a silent protest in red robes and white bonnets - like the characters in the dystopian novel and TV series where fertile women are captured and forced to have children.

The proposed state legislation would ban a method of abortion commonly carried out in the second trimester.

Critics call the bill unconstitutional.

Senate Bill 145 is sponsored by members of Ohio's Republican party who say they want to end what they describe as inhumane and brutal dismemberment abortions.

The bill makes an exception where the mother's life is in danger.

However, opponents say the ban against dilation and evacuation is an attempt to block access to a common and safe abortion method.

They also argue it would particularly affect women who already struggle to obtain access to an abortion.

Jo Ingles, Ohio Public Radio/TV Statehouse News  Handsmaid Tale protesters in Ohio Statehouse rotunda (13 June 2017)Jo Ingles, Ohio Public Radio/TV Statehouse News
The protesters gathered in the Ohio Statehouse rotunda

The Handmaid's Tale has inspired several protests against anti-abortion bills this year, including in Texas and Missouri.

The novel, by Margaret Atwood, is set in a future, dystopian America, where a violent dictatorship has been imposed and women have been stripped of all their rights.

In the novel, much of the population has become sterile, so the few remaining fertile women are captured and given to society's highest-ranking men as "handmaids", to bear the children.

Speaking to the BBC in October, Atwood said the book still had resonance, and had become a meme, because "the religious right in the United States has not faded away".

Margaret Atwood said she worries about women's issues under Mr Trump

Anti-abortion activists have been energised by the Republicans gaining control over the White House and Senate in November's election.

President Trump has in the past expressed support for a woman's right to have an abortion, but during the campaign announced that his views on the subject "have evolved".

He told an interviewer that he favoured "some form of punishment" for women who have abortions, but changed his position only hours later to say only the person performing the abortion should be punished.