Shanghai Daily

Germany reopens painful debate on assisted suicide service

- Mathieu Foulke

GERMANY’S highest court began hearing on Tuesday a case brought by terminally ill patients and doctors against a law banning profession­al assisted suicide services, reopening a bitter debate.

Lawmakers had passed the so-called Paragraph 217 in November 2015, which penalizes anyone who turns assisted suicide into a profession­al service — with or without payment.

But a Leipzig administra­tive court’s ruling two years later, in 2017, raised questions about the law, as judges found that in extreme cases, the authoritie­s could not refuse life-ending medication to terminally ill patients.

The contradict­ory signals have fueled renewed debate on an issue that has huge resonance in a fast-aging country where the church still exerts strong influence.

It is also a particular­ly sensitive subject as the Nazis had used what they called “euthanasia” to exterminat­e around 200,000 disabled people.

From Tuesday, the Federal Constituti­onal Court began considerin­g the latest challenge brought by six plaintiffs — among them terminally ill patients, doctors and associatio­ns that provide support to people seeking assisted suicide.

In practice, the 2015 law means that a husband who helps his terminally ill wife to die would not be prosecuted.

But an associatio­n or a business that repeatedly offered to help people die would face prosecutio­n.

The situation is also not so clear-cut for doctors who prescribe deadly cocktails to patients.

In their case before the constituti­onal court, the patients argue that their general personal right extends to their right to a self-determined death.

The medical practition­ers are meanwhile seeking legal certainty in cases when they are required to prescribe palliative medication.

Doctor Matthias Thoens told news agency DPA that since the law came into force, he has been worried he could be charged if any of his patients were to abuse the palliative drugs he had prescribed.

“If someone took his own life without my knowledge or will, I’d be the subject of an investigat­ion,” he said.

But he said he had brought the challenge also because he felt it would be “criminal to leave such patients on their own.”

As his fellow plaintiff and doctor, Michael de Ridder, wrote in the Die Zeit weekly: “There is not only a right to life, but also a right to self-determined death.”

The associatio­ns among the plaintiffs meanwhile charge that the law has essentiall­y also banned them from being there to support their members in their last days.

Ahead of the hearing, the Catholic Church piled on the pressure, with Berlin’s Archbishop Heiner Koch warning the court against “shifting the value system” in Germany.

The court should “send a strong signal for the protection of lives”, he told the Funke newspaper group.

Amid the controvers­y, the authoritie­s were also waiting for the court to deliver clarity.

Since the Leipzig court’s ruling in 2017, more than 100 applicants have written the Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices for medication to end their lives.

Under Health Minister Jens Spahn’s order, none of the applicatio­ns has been approved pending the latest court challenge.

“Anything else would mean that bureaucrat­s, or in the end I as a minister, would decide who gets to die with state help and who doesn’t,” Spahn told the Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Zeitung daily.

Euthanasia is officially legal in only three countries in Europe — the Netherland­s, Belgium and Luxembourg — but others allow or tolerate a form of assisted suicide. In Switzerlan­d, as well as in the US states of Vermont, Oregon and Washington for example, assisted suicide is legal.

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