The Oklahoman

Colombian man euthanized, had nontermina­l condition

60-year-old had lung ailment since 2008

- Astrid Suárez

CALI, Colombia – For the first time in years, Víctor Escobar stopped taking most of the medicines needed for his lung disease. There was no longer any need. On Friday night, he became the first Colombian to be euthanized despite not yet being in terminal condition.

“I feel an immense tranquilit­y. I don’t feel fear of what is to come,” Escobar told The Associated Press last week. “They have told me that the process is going to be a slow sedation at first so that I have time to say goodbye.

“After that is the injection of the euthanasia, which is going to be something without pain – a very tranquil death. I trust in God that all this will be that way,” he said in a weak voice while sitting on a sofa in the small home he had been paying off with a pension of $250 a month.

His attorney, Luis Giraldo, said Friday night the process had been completed and Escobar was dead.

Escobar was the first to use a July ruling of the nation’s top court that changed the rules for euthanasia, allowing it to be applied to people who suffer intense physical or psychologi­cal suffering because of a grave and incurable disease, even if they are not yet near death.

His family declined to reveal the name of the clinic where the euthanasia took place.

The country depenalize­d euthanasia in 1997, but only for those considered to have fewer than six months to live. Although polls indicated most Colombians favor expanding it to people such as Escobar, the legislatur­e so far hasn’t formally followed the court’s lead by explicitly authorizin­g it and some remain deeply opposed.

The Catholic Church issued a statement in July saying that “any action or omission with the intention of provoking death to overcome pain constitute­s homicide.”

From the apartment in Cali, where he was born, Escobar was conscious of the importance of his case, the first in Latin America.

“It is the door so that a patient like me, with degenerati­ve diseases, has the opportunit­y for a dignified death,” he said Thursday.

He had been ill since 2008, when two strokes cost him the movement of half his body, though some of that returned. He later developed chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease, hypertensi­on, diabetes, severe arthrosis and costochond­ral junction syndrome – a painful inflammation where the ribs meet the breastbone.

Escobar fought to obtain euthanasia for more than two years. Judges twice turned him down because his illnesses were not yet considered terminal.

“It was a complicate­d affair to confront justice, the political parties, religion and many powerful people as somebody who only had (access to) communicat­ions media,” Giraldo said.

Escobar said he would say farewell to his wife, three children, brother and cousins at a midday meal.

“I will have the opportunit­y that they give me the warmth of the family and their accompanim­ent and also that I can thank them in my own name,” he said. “It will be a day of rejoicing for us, and I hope it will be something very private.”

 ?? ?? Victor Escobar, 60, on Friday night became one of the first Latin Americans to receive euthanasia without being terminally ill. LUIS ROBAYO/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
Victor Escobar, 60, on Friday night became one of the first Latin Americans to receive euthanasia without being terminally ill. LUIS ROBAYO/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

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