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French panel recommends legalising assisted suicide

Published: 17 Dec 2013 - 08:00 am | Last Updated: 28 Jan 2022 - 05:44 pm

 

PARIS: A panel set up at the request of President Francois Hollande yesterday recommended legalising assisted suicide in France, where the debate on euthanasia has re-emerged after several end-of-life tragedies.
The suicides of two elderly couples in November and the heartwrenching testimony of a politician who watched her terminally-ill mother die after taking pills have shocked and moved France, where euthanasia is illegal.
“The possibility of committing medically assisted suicide... is, in our eyes, a legitimate right of a patient close to death or suffering from a terminal pathology, based first and foremost on their lucid consent and complete awareness”, said the panel, made up of 18 citizens picked by polling firm Ifop to represent the population.
The so-called “Conference of Citizens” said the patient’s lucidity would have to be evaluated by at least two doctors.
The “Conference of Citizens” said it was in favour of euthanasia in very specific circumstances, such as when the patient is not able to give his or her direct consent, but ruled out legalising the practice as a whole.
The panel also called for more palliative care in France, where it said only 20 percent of people who need it have access to it.
Assisted suicide, which is legal in Switzerland, allows a doctor to provide a patient with all the necessary lethal substances to end their life, but lets them carry out the final act.
Euthanasia goes a step further, and allows doctors themselves to administer the lethal doses of medicine. 
AFP