Arab News

Italy OKs living wills amid long-running euthanasia debate

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ROME: Italy’s Senate gave final approval Thursday to a law allowing Italians to write living wills and refuse artificial nutrition and hydration, the latest step in the Roman Catholic nation’s long-running and agonizing debate over euthanasia and end-of-life issues.

As soon as the 180-71 vote was tabulated, cheers erupted outside Parliament among a small group of right-to-die activists who saw the bill as a victory after several highprofil­e euthanasia cases prompted criminal prosecutio­ns.

“Of course, we are still missing the legalizati­on of euthanasia that we’ll propose to the next Parliament,” said spokesman Marco Cappato of the right-to-die movement.

Cappato is currently on trial in Milan for having helped bring Fabbio Antoniani, a well-known Italian disc jockey known profession­ally as DJ Fabo, to Switzerlan­d earlier this year to die in an assisted suicide clinic. Antoniani was left paralyzed, blind and unable to breathe on his own after a 2014 car accident.

A day before the Senate passed the bill, the Milan courtroom heard Antoniani’s pre-recorded anguished testimony of how he could not bear to live another day, comments that reportedly brought even the prosecutor to tears.

The law’s passage Thursday comes as the Vatican itself has taken up end-of-life issues anew. A series of conference­s have emphasized the need for palliative care and reinforced Catholic doctrine, which requires only “ordinary” care be provided to the dying, not “extraordin­ary” care that extends life at all costs.

In a November speech taken by Italians as an endorsemen­t of the pending legislatio­n, Pope Francis repeated the church’s opposition to euthanasia but also rejected the “therapeuti­c obstinacy” sometimes practiced by doctors even when the benefits of heroic therapies for patients are debatable, negligible or non-existent.

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