Euthanasia: Sad & Salutory

Salutory and sad reading. Sad because of lives ended and salutory because of the growing haste to end life by our own hand.

Can nobody see the abuse of the young, dementing, the struggling, people with disabilities, the elderly, the everybody!?

Article from The Daily Telegraph, London via The Age 14 January 2013:

Identical twins have been killed by Belgian doctors in a unique case under  the country’s euthanasia laws.

The 45-year-old brothers from the Antwerp region were born deaf and sought  euthanasia after finding that they would also soon go blind.

They were very happy. It was a relief to see the end of their  suffering.

They told doctors that they were unable to bear the thought of not being able  to see each other again.

The twins, who have not been named but have been pictured on Belgian  television, had spent their entire lives together, sharing a flat and working as  cobblers.

Belgium’s Het Laatste Nieuws newspaper reported at the weekend that  doctors at Brussels University Hospital in Jette “euthanised” the two men by  lethal injection on December 14.

Under Belgian law, euthanasia is allowed if those wishing to end their lives  are able to make their wishes clear and a doctor judges that they are suffering  unbearable pain.

David Dufour, the doctor who presided over the euthanasia, said the twins had  died together and had taken the decision in “full conscience”.

“They were very happy. It was a relief to see the end of their suffering,” he  said. “They had a cup of coffee in the hall, it went well and a rich  conversation. Then the separation from their parents and brother was very serene  and beautiful. At the last there was a little wave of their hands and then they  were gone.”

The case is unusual because neither of the men was terminally ill or  suffering extreme physical pain.

Just days after the twins were killed by doctors, Belgium’s ruling Socialists  tabled a legal amendment that will allow the euthanasia of children and  Alzheimer’s sufferers. The controversial change will allow minors and people  suffering from dementia to seek permission to die. “The idea is to update the  law to take better account of dramatic situations and extremely harrowing  cases,” said Thierry Giet, the Socialist leader.

If passed later this year, the law will allow euthanasia to be “extended to  minors if they are capable of discernment or affected by an incurable illness or  suffering that we cannot alleviate“.

In 2002, Belgium was the second country in the world after Holland to  legalise euthanasia, but the law now applies only to people over 18. Some 1133  cases of euthanasia – mostly for terminal cancer – were recorded in 2011,  according to the last official figures.

Last December, the Belgium-based European Institute of Bioethics published a  report raising concerns about “the absence of any effective control” over  euthanasia and “ever-widening interpretation” of the law. It noted that in 10  years and 5500 euthanasia cases, not one had been referred to police for  investigation.

Article: ‘They were very happy’: Belgian twin brothers choose euthanasia rather than  blindness

Also, Euthanasia Law a blunt instrument.


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