Dutch euthanasia supporter warns UK of ‘slippery slope to random killings’
A CHAMPION of the Dutch euthanasia system has admitted that British critics are right to warn that assisted dying is a slippery slope to ‘random killing of the defenceless’.
Dr Bert Keizer said that the type of patients whose lives are ended in the Netherlands has spread far beyond the terminally ill and now includes physically and mentally healthy old people who ‘find that their life no longer has content’.
Dr Keizer, one of his country’s most prominent practitioners of euthanasia, said that, in future, assisted dying in the Netherlands is likely to be extended to prisoners serving life sentences ‘who desperately long for death’ and disabled children whose parents believe their suffering is hopeless. He said that after assisted dying was legalised in the Netherlands in 2002 ‘what our British colleagues had predicted years earlier, with unconcealed complacency, happened: those who embark on euthanasia venture down a slippery slope along which you irrevocably slide down to the random killing of defenceless sick people’.
Dr Keizer added: ‘Every time a line was drawn, it was also pushed back.’
His view, set out in the Dutch Medical Association Journal, amounts to a warning to British right-to-die campaigners. They have pressed in Parliament for a law to allow doctors to prescribe deadly drugs only to terminally ill patients and in recent weeks have revived their attempts.
But Parliament has repeatedly refused to change the 1961 Suicide Act, which provides for a jail sentence of up to 14 years for anyone who helps someone to die.
Holyrood has twice voted on assisted suicide bills.
One was brought forward by independent MSP Margo MacDonald in 2010. It was defeated by 85 votes to 16.
Following Miss MacDonald’s death from Parkinson’s disease, Green MSP Patrick Harvie introduced a Bill in 2015. It was rejected by 36 votes to 82.