A giant “No” slogan arranged in the early hours of Thursday on the side of Ben Bulben in Co Sligo has been taken down.
The word was erected in 160ft letters using plastic cladding by anti-abortion campaigners in support of a No vote in the upcoming referendum on the Eighth Amendment.
A spokesman for the county council confirmed that the sign had been dismantled, though the work had not been carried out by council staff. The council received a number of complaints about the slogan, he said.
Best one from @dj_mckeown pic.twitter.com/gVNeXy7AMp
— Annie West (@anniewestdotcom) May 17, 2018
Here's the latest Martyn Turner’s cartoon https://t.co/5Y1VW6aCtS pic.twitter.com/vHv4okqmWn
— Irish Times Opinion (@IrishTimesOpEd) May 18, 2018
— Annie West (@anniewestdotcom) May 17, 2018
They were trying to warn us pic.twitter.com/r0TTyqNH5m
— Fuchsia MacAree (@fuchsiamacaree) May 17, 2018
There's always two sides... #repealthe8th #repeal #Together4Yes @anniewestdotcom pic.twitter.com/7fuj7LEbTO
— Darren Purcell (@DarrenPurcell) May 17, 2018
For you @claireoconnell pic.twitter.com/JGmjeD76mQ
— Annie West (@anniewestdotcom) May 17, 2018
Yes campaigners respond quickly to the No sign appearing on Ben Bulben #benbulben #repealthe8th pic.twitter.com/OJygeeP0Kb
— Ken Byrne (@kenb21) May 17, 2018
The erection of the sign prompted a number of people to create mock images online and in print, proposing alternative messages for the mountainside. Artist Fuchsia MacAree used the “No” to turn Ben Bulben into a “volcano”, while Yes advocate Darren Purcell transformed the slogan to read “No advice from me I’m a mountain”.
The National Parks and Wildlife Service had called for the removal of the sign saying the installation of “alien materials such as this onto a special area of conservation is insensitive to its conservation status and incompatible with the habitat”.
“The owners should procure its immediate removal so that Ben Bulben is returned undamaged to its natural and beloved state,” it said on Thursday
Tommy Banks, one of those involved in erecting the slogan, on Thursday said about 20 people involved in the operation had been on the mountain from 4am that day, carrying out what he described as a “mammoth task”.
Mr Banks said they had permission from all the land owners and had been helped by “men of all ages, and women as well, down making tea and sandwiches”.