Texarkana Gazette

Legislator­s in Spain OK bill on euthanasia

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MADRID — Lawmakers voted Thursday to make Spain the sixth country in the world, and the fourth in Europe, to allow physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia for long-suffering patients with incurable diseases and for people with unbearable permanent conditions.

The Spanish parliament’s lower house voted 202-140 with two abstention­s on the final passage of the euthanasia bill. Legislator­s from the left-wing governing coalition and other parties supported it, while conservati­ve and farright lawmakers voted “no” and vowed to overturn the legislatio­n.

Health Minister Carolina Darias hailed the passing of the bill as an important step “toward the recognitio­n of human rights.”

“We are heading towards a more humane and fair society,” she told the Congress of Deputies.

The bill was the result of a lengthy legislativ­e journey that began three years ago and underwent several rounds of revision in parliament­ary committees and in the Senate. It is expected to go into effect in mid-June.

Euthanasia — when a doctor directly administer­s fatal drugs to a patient — is either legal or sanctioned by courts in Belgium, Canada, Luxembourg, Colombia and the Netherland­s. In Switzerlan­d and some U.S. states, medically assisted suicide — when patients self-administer lethal drugs under medical supervisio­n — is permitted.

Politician­s in Portugal have tried to pass a law similar to neighborin­g Spain’s, but the country’s Constituti­onal Court this week blocked the legislatio­n, arguing that the bill was imprecise in identifyin­g the circumstan­ces under which life-ending procedures could occur.

Under the new Spanish law, the process for patients to get approval to die can last over a month, with two requests in writing followed up by consultati­ons with medical profession­als not previously involved in the case. Only after a fourth and last statement where patients repeat their desire to die, a regional committee of experts could give the final go-ahead.

The law allows medical workers, whether in the public or private system, to refuse to participat­e on grounds of belief.

Protesters both in favor and against the new law gathered outside Madrid’s lower house building while lawmakers voted.

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