The Daily Telegraph

Assisted dying for terminally ill put to vote in Scotland

Holyrood to debate Bill to give people with lifethreat­ening conditions right to end their lives

- By Simon Johnson SCOTTISH POLITICAL EDITOR

SCOTLAND could become the first part of the UK to allow the terminally ill to seek assistance to end their lives after legislatio­n was tabled at Holyrood.

Liam Mcarthur, a Liberal Democrat MSP, unveiled a private member’s bill in the Scottish Parliament that would give mentally competent people over 16 who have been diagnosed with a terminal condition the right to end their life.

People would not be able to opt for the procedure for any other reason, and safeguards would include independen­t assessment­s by two doctors and a 14-day cooling-off period. In addition, there would also be a requiremen­t for those requesting an assisted death to have lived in Scotland for at least a year and they must administer the lifeending medication themselves.

Doctors and others opposed to the procedure would be able to exempt themselves from being involved.

Two previous attempts at Holyrood to change the law were decisively defeated but Mr Mcarthur expressed confidence it would pass this time.

The leaders of the three main parties – Humza Yousaf for the SNP, Douglas Ross for the Tories and Anas Sarwar for Labour – have all indicated their opposition. But MSPS are expected to be given a free vote on a conscience issue. Sources close to Mr Mcarthur said senior SNP Cabinet ministers backed the plan despite Mr Yousaf ’s opposition.

A final proposal for a Bill received backing from 36 MSPS – more than a quarter of the total at Holyrood and as many as the number who voted for the previous legislatio­n that was rejected.

Mr Mcarthur’s Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill is expected to be debated in the autumn.

If passed, Scotland could be the first part of the UK to legalise the practice. Sir Keir Starmer has promised a vote in the next parliament on allowing it in

England if he becomes prime minister.

Unveiling the legislatio­n at Holyrood, Mr Mcarthur said: “This Bill contains robust safeguards, similar to those which have been safely and successful­ly introduced in countries such as Australia, New Zealand and the United States, where they continue to enjoy strong public support.

“Our current laws on assisted dying are failing too many terminally ill Scots at the end of life. Too often, and despite the best efforts of palliative care, dying people are facing traumatic deaths that harm both them and those they leave behind.”

Mr Ross said he had “carefully considered” the proposals but had not been convinced they contained “adequate safeguards to protect vulnerable individual­s”. He confirmed Tory MSPS would not be whipped, and Jackson Carlaw, his predecesso­r as Scottish Tory leader, made clear his strong support for the legislatio­n.

‘[The Bill] attacks human dignity and introduces a idea that a citizen can lose their value and worth’

But religious groups including the Catholic Church made clear their opposition. John Keenan, the Bishop of Paisley, warned the Bill “attacks human dignity and introduces a dangerous idea that a citizen can lose their value and worth”.

He said: “Assisted suicide sends a message that there are situations when suicide is an appropriat­e response to one’s individual circumstan­ces, worries, anxieties. It normalises suicide and accepts that some people are beyond hope.”

Senior medics also expressed concerns, with Dr Fiona Maccormick, of the Associatio­n for Palliative Medicine, accusing supporters of using “euphemisti­c language” that avoided the word “suicide”.

She told BBC Scotland : “As a palliative care doctor, when I see patients who are suffering, I don’t see the answer to their suffering as being to end the life of the sufferer.”

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