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Subject: [India Thinkers Net] Euthanasia - September29, 2003





It appears that the Indian society has to deal
with many issues which it hasn't thought about
so far .It may not be far when discussions
regarding humane executions,decriminalisation
of certain sexual offenses,sexual preferences,
change in the age of consent etc come up.

The legislature needs to think about all these
in the light of the developments.

The following article om euthanasia provides
food for thought.



-----------------------------------------------------

From: "D.D." <hermanngoe@yahoo.com>
Date: Sun Sep 28, 2003 7:11pm
Subject: Son's Wish to Die, and Mother's Help, Stir French Debate  

(The New York Times) (September 27, 2003)

Son's Wish to Die, and Mother's Help, Stir French
Debate
by CRAIG S. SMITH

PARIS, Sept. 26 ??” "I Ask the Right to Die," written by
Vincent Humbert, a 22-year-old French paraplegic, hit
bookstores here on Thursday. Today he died, two days
after his mother put an overdose of sedatives into his
intravenous line.

She acted on the third anniversary of the car accident
that left him paralyzed, mute and blind.

His death and his book calling for the legalization of
euthanasia have transfixed the nation and drawn the
debate over assisted suicide out of hospital wards and
into people's homes.

Assisted suicide is outlawed in France but is
permitted under certain circumstances in the
Netherlands and Belgium. It is fully legal in
Switzerland, where there are associations that help
terminally ill patients kill themselves.

Radio call-in programs, television talk shows and the
opinion pages of the country's newspapers have swelled
with discussion of Mr. Humbert's death and what
punishment, if any, his mother, Marie Humbert, should
receive.

Ms. Humbert, 48, who had campaigned for the right to
end her son's life, was taken into custody by the
police on suspicion of attempted murder late Wednesday
but was released on Thursday and allowed to see her
son before he died. She was subsequently hospitalized
at an undisclosed location. Her current whereabouts is
unknown.

Lib?©ration, the country's largest left-wing daily,
praised Ms. Humbert in an editorial headlined, "Let us
end this hypocrisy." An editorial in Le Monde,
France's leading newspaper, called only for a national
debate but pointed out that the country's national
ethics consulting committee recommended in January
2000 that a law be passed legalizing euthanasia in
exceptional cases.

So far, the country's judicial system is dealing
gently with Ms. Humbert, who won enormous public
sympathy in her campaign for euthanasia.

Justice Minister Dominique Perben asked prosecutors in
a statement today "to act with the greatest humanity
in applying the law, taking into account the suffering
of the mother and the young man." The lead prosecutor
in the case told reporters that an official inquiry
into Mr. Humbert's death would be undertaken "in due
time."

Mr. Humbert's plight captured national attention last
December after he wrote a direct appeal to France's
president, Jacques Chirac, asking for the legal right
to end his own life. Mr. Chirac wrote back that he
could not grant the request "because the president of
the republic doesn't have that right, but I understand
your helplessness and deep despair in facing the
living conditions that you endure."

Mr. Humbert then set about writing his book from his
bed at the same hospital in the northern port of
Berck-sur-Mer where Jean-Dominique Bauby, all but
incapacitated by a stroke, wrote his haunting memoir,
"The Diving Bell and the Butterfly." Mr. Bauby died in
1997, two days after his book was published.

Mr. Humbert wrote his book with the help of a
journalist, Fr?©d?©ric Veille, by pressing with his
thumb and nodding his head to spell out words as Mr.
Veille read repeatedly through the alphabet.

In "I Ask the Right to Die," Mr. Humbert recounts with
heartbreaking bitterness how his life as a healthy,
careful young fireman ended when his car met an
oncoming truck on a narrow country road. After
enduring months of ebbing hope that he would recover
any of his lost faculties ??” he even lost his senses of
taste and smell ??” he decided he wanted to die and with
his mother began the campaign.

Mr. Humbert had argued to be allowed to end his life
legally in France because he was unable to afford the
cost of transport abroad, even if it could have been
arranged.

"Then, so that you understand me better, so that the
debate about euthanasia finally reaches another level,
so that this word and this act are no longer a taboo
subject, so that we no longer let live lucid people
like me who want to put an end to their own suffering,
I wanted to write this book that I will never read,"
he wrote.

In the book, which was the second-best-selling title
on France's Amazon.com Web site this morning, Mr.
Humbert described asking his mother to kill him and
her decision to do so. As the third anniversary of his
Sept. 24 accident approached, his mother signaled her
intention to kill her son in media interviews.

Ms. Humbert injected sedatives into her son's
intravenous drip late Wednesday, sending him into a
coma. The family then pleaded with doctors to let him
die. Mr. Humbert died today after doctors abandoned
efforts to keep him alive, saying in a statement that
they had made their "collective and difficult decision
in complete independence."

Mr. Humbert's book ends with a plea to readers to
empathize with his mother and leave her in peace.
"What she has done for me is surely the most beautiful
proof of love in the world," he wrote.
 



 






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