GIVE ME THE RIGHT TO.. DIE...

by pankaj kumar | October 3, 2008 at 05:32 am | 60 views | 1 comment | 2 recommendations

One of the most debatable issue in the humanity is looking to gind a ethical and logical as well as legal solution.

In a case which could affect the European Convention on Human Rights, a woman with multiple sclerosis has launched a bid in London's High Court to clarify the law on assisted suicide.

Debbie Purdy, 45, wants assurance that her husband cannot be prosecuted for helping her travel to Switzerland to end her life at some stage in the future.

The law in England and Wales states that assisted suicide is a crime punishable with a maximum sentence of 14 years in prison. Purdy fears that her husband, a Cuban national, would be treated more harshly were he to accompany her.

She said that if her husband is liable for prosecution, she would travel abroad alone while she is healthy enough to do so -- but before she is ready to die.

"I enjoy my life and the people around me, and I don't want to die until my condition becomes unbearable. If the law is not clarified, I may be forced to travel abroad alone before I am ready," she said in a statement.

"I just want clarity so I know whether or not my husband Omar will be prosecuted or questioned by the police if I decide to travel abroad and he accompanies me."

Purdy has said she is considering traveling to a clinic run by the Swiss right-to-die organization, Dignitas. Since 1992, almost 100 British citizens have ended their lives at the Dignitas clinic without their relatives being prosecuted. Purdy and the organization Dignity in Dying say they want to know if a decision has been made not to prosecute relatives.

In June, two top judges in Britain allowed Purdy to bring a full judicial review in the case, which her lawyer says may fall within the scope of the European Convention on Human Rights.

The hearing is set to last for two days, and judgment is likely to be reserved until a later date.

Hot button issue in Germany

Advocates on both sides of the euthanasia debate in Germany will be watching with interest to see how the director of public prosecutions (DPP) responds to Purdy's case, as in recent months, assisted suicide has again become a hot button issue.

In July, former Hamburg justice senator and right-to-die campaigner Roger Kusch, said he had assisted a 79-year-old woman who committed suicide despite the fact that she had no life-threatening disease or great amount of pain.

His participation in her death was strongly condemned by German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who stressed that her Christian Democratic Union (CDU) opposed any form of assisted suicide.

Bavaria and four other German states are pushing for new laws to ban commercial ventures that help people kill themselves.

Many in Germany want to prevent the country from following in Switzerland's footsteps. Opponents to assisted suicide say that liberal Swiss laws on euthanasia have led to a bustling trade in assisted suicide with the help of organizations

recommend Add a comment
ms. negativity
ms. negativity
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 17:41 on October 4th, 2008

The prohibition against suicide is one of the few Christian taboos still upheld in many Western democracies.  The Catholic Church remains a vehement opponent of ethuniasia. Other cultures -- the Japanese, pagan Romans to name two-- have had very different attitudes towards sucicide.  I really resent the state's moral intrusion into people's private lives.  People should be able to have some control of the manner of their deaths and they should not be denied the opportunity to die with dignity.  

Add a comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

October 3, 2008 at 05:32 am by pankaj kumar, 60 views, 1 comment

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from