The Freeman

Canada top court allows doctor-assisted suicide

OTTAWA — Canada's Supreme Court on Friday unanimousl­y struck down a ban on doctor-assisted suicide for mentally competent adults suffering from an incurable disease, reversing a decision on the books since 1993.

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The ruling was, however, suspended for one year to allow lawmakers an opportunit­y to enact new rules surroundin­g the divisive issue.

The court ruled that an earlier ban on the practice was too broad, saying it wrongly applied to more people than the small group it was meant to protect -- "vulnerable persons from being induced to commit suicide at a time of weakness."

It noted that making it a crime to assist another person who is "grievously and irremediab­ly ill" in ending their own life had left the sick with only two options: suicide "often by violent or dangerous means," or suffering until natural death.

"The choice is cruel," the court concluded.

Nothing in the court's ruling indicated that doctors would be compelled to take part in assisted suicide if asked by a patient.

"Physician-assisted death is the existentia­l and moral issue of our time," said Conservati­ve member of Parliament Steven Fletcher.

Fletcher, who is a paraplegic, had proposed loosening the ban on doctorassi­sted suicide last year, and said he looked forward to working to revise the rules.

Fletcher said he agreed with the court, but favors maintainin­g regulation­s to prevent abuses.

The ruling Tories will "take the time to thoughtful­ly review this very important decision," Attorney General Peter MacKay said, recognizin­g that there is "a wide and obviously very emotional range of perspectiv­es on this issue."

It was not immediatel­y clear if a new law would be proposed before or after Canada's general election in October, or if doctor-assisted suicide would become an election issue.

The Canadian Medical Associatio­n said it would consult with the government on a new framework.

The CMA "recognizes that there are rare occasions where patients have such a degree of suffering, even with access to palliative and end of life care, that they request medical aid in dying," it said in a statement.

"We believe in those cases... that medical aid in dying may be appropriat­e."

A legal challenge of the ban was brought by the families of two women in the western province of British Columbia who have since died, and was supported by civil liberties groups.

One of the women, Gloria Taylor, died of an infection after suffering from amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's disease.

Taylor said she did not want to "live in a bedridden state, stripped of dignity and independen­ce," nor did she want an "ugly death," according to trial transcript­s.

The other woman, Kay Carter, traveled to Switzerlan­d, where she was allowed to commit doctorassi­sted suicide, saying before she died that she was terrified at age 89 of "dying inch by inch."

The Supreme Court's decision reverses its own 1993 ruling in the case of Sue Rodriguez, a pioneer in the fight for the right to die in Canada.

At that time, the court expressed concern about protecting vulnerable persons, but in its new ruling pointed to changed Canadian social values.

In the more than two decades since the original ruling, debate on the issue has not abated, with parliament voting down several motions seeking to decriminal­ize assisted suicide.

But recent polling shows a strong majority of Canadians -- 85 percent -support the right to die.

Some form of assisted suicide is legal in Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherland­s and Switzerlan­d, as well as a handful of US states including Oregon. (AFP)

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