Vicky Phelan to receive Freedom of Limerick

David Raleigh
Cancer campaigner Vicky Phelan is to receive the Freedom of Limerick for her “brave” championing of patients' rights and unearthing the CervicalCheck scandal.
A special meeting of Limerick City and County council on Tuesday afternoon unanimously agreed to bestow the honorary title on the Mooncoin native.
Ms Phelan will be only the fifth woman to receive the accolade, which include English-born Irish republican revolutionary and suffragette Maud Gonne MacBride.
The Mayor of Limerick, Fine Gael Cllr Daniel Butler, said he made the decision after he was “inundated with calls, texts, and phone calls” from people asking him to honour Ms Phelan. The mother-of-two announced last month that she was facing palliative care following her late diagnosis of terminal cervical cancer which led to the CervicalCheck scandal.
Mayor Butler said people had shown “an outpouring of love and respect for Vicky because of the impact she has had on Irish women and society”.
He said a number of artists have also contacted him about the possibility of creating a painting or sculpture “to try and express the love and regard that the people of Limerick have for Vicky Phelan”.
The mayor said Ms Phelan is an “inspiration” to all people, and that she “continues to face her challenges head on with a drive and determination and respect”.
He said Ms Phelan had fought a “tireless fight for women who have been effected by the CervicalCheck scandal, and her work encapsulates the Freedom of Limerick, and how women should be treated”.
He added that Ms Phelan, an advocate for the rights of terminally ill people to end their suffering, should also be applauded for “opening up the conversation about end of life, and how that will transform Irish life and society”.
Fine Gael Cllr John Sheahan said it was incumbent on the council to treat Ms Phelan’s story as “sensitively” as it could.
Cllr Sheahan said Ms Phelan should be honoured “because misdiagnosis and late diagnosis has cost this country a lot of lives, and this woman took a brave decision to waive her anonymity in relation to her campaign”.









