From the DW:
“Australian state legalizes voluntary euthanasia”
An Australian state has enacted euthanasia laws to allow
terminally-ill patients to end their lives with lethal medication. The first
death could take place in as soon as three weeks. Voluntary euthanasia became
legal in Australia's second-most populous state, Victoria on Wednesday, more
than 20 years after the country repealed the first mercy-killing law for the
terminally ill. The process of an assisted suicide would take at least 10 days,
so the first terminally-ill patient could die from swallowing a lethal cocktail
of chemicals on June 29.
Strict conditions
The legislation introduces strict safeguards so that only
eligible patients can apply for voluntary deaths. Only terminally-ill adult
patients with fewer than six months to live — or one year in the case of motor
neuron disease and multiple sclerosis — can access the scheme. Residency
requirements and medical assessments from multiple doctors are mandatory. Patients
are barred from traveling from overseas or other states to access the
euthanasia laws in Victoria. Around 12 persons are expected to avail of the
scheme this year.
Criticism and support
Victoria State Prime Minister Daniel Andrews, whose father
died of cancer in 106, said the laws give patients a "dignified option at
the end of their life." "We have taken a compassionate
approach," he told reporters. Australia's Catholic leadership slammed the
enactment of the euthanasia laws. In an open letter, four bishops described it
as a "new and troubling chapter of health care" in the state. "We
cannot cooperate with the facilitation of suicide, even when it seems motivated
by empathy or kindness," the letter said. "Pope Francis has
encouraged ordinary Catholics everywhere to resist euthanasia and protect the
old, the young and the vulnerable from being cast aside in a 'throw-away'
culture," Peter Comensoli, the archbishop of Melbourne, and three other
Victoria bishops added. Euthanasia activists hailed the law but called it
"too permissive and too stringent." Philip Nitschke told Melbourne's
The Age newspaper that the legal conditions for euthanasia are "too strict
and onerous," and could result in "challenges to the law pressing to
broaden access."
Start of a public conversation
Other states have debated assisted dying in the past, but
legislators failed to approve it. "Although over 40 attempts to change the
law in Australia have failed in the past, most recent reform efforts appear to
be getting closer to laws changing," Ben White from Queensland University
of Technology told AFP news agency. "Western Australia, Queensland and
South Australia (states) all have inquires considering change," he added. Christine
Thornton, the widow of a 54-year-old Victorian man who was euthanized in a
Swiss clinic four months ago, said the introduction of voluntary mercy-killing
in Victoria should be the beginning, and not the end, of a public debate on a
lack of end-of-life choices in Australia. She said that four months ago, her
husband could not find two doctors in Victoria who could confirm that his
ailment would have killed him within a year.
^ People who are terminally-ill deserve to end their life as
they want to. It is all well and good for a healthy person to try and pass
judgement on someone who is terminally-ill and in extreme pain, but none of us
can know what we would do if in the same situation. I believe that voluntary
euthanasia as well as doctor-assisted euthanasia should be legal everywhere around
the world. As long as there are strict protocols to follow (and they are
strictly followed) and no one (patient or doctor) is forced into anything then
I see no issue if a terminally-ill person wants to end their own suffering. ^
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