Parliament
of Belgium on 14 February 2014 legalised death to terminally ill children of
any age.
The Parliament took the decision despite of opposition fr
om the Church and some pediatricians. This action of legalizing death
for the children came 12 years after the country leaglised euthanasia for
adults. This ground-breaking legislation was adopted by 86 votes in favour. 44
votes were against the legislation with 12 abstentions. This legislation had given
a chance of euthanasia to children in a hopeless medical situation of constant
and unbearable suffering that cannot be eased and which will cause death on a
short-term.
With
this action, Belgium, the Catholic country, became the second country after
Netherlands to allow mercy-killing for children and the first to lift all age
restrictions. The legislation was voted following the results of opinion
polls in which majority of Belgians backed the move with one survey by putting
support at 75 percent. Under the approved legislation by the Parliament, a
young child will be allowed to end their life with the help of a doctor. The
legislation has not fixed any age limit for minors suffering from a terminal
illness to opt for the death by use of a lethal injection. The legislation will
become a law only after the royal signature.
Other
European countries that allows active euthanasia are
•
Luxembourg, which permits active euthanasia for over 18 years in age
•
Switzerland lets doctors to help adult patients to commit suicide
India’s postion on
Euthanasia
The
case for Euthanasia or mercy killing in India emerged with the filing of a
petition by Pinki Virani for Aruna Shanbaug in Supreme Court in 2011. Aruna
Shanbaug is lying almost in a vegetative state in King Edward Memorial Hospital
in Mumbai since 1973. Pinky Virani, who is a journalist and has written a book
on Shanbaug, argued in her petition that Shanbaug is being forced to live her
life stripped of basic dignity.
Supreme
Court taking her concerns as genuine, however, in Aruna Ramachandra Shanbaug
vs. Union of India case (2011) ruled in favour of Passive Euthanasia and not
Active Euthanasia. However, passive euthanasia is contingent upon
circumstances, for example, in the case of an irreversible coma. Supreme Court
also ruled that in each case, the relevant High Court will evaluate the merits
of the case, and refer the case to a medical board before deciding on whether
passive euthanasia can apply. And till Parliament introduces new laws on
euthanasia, it is Ms Shanbaug’s case that is to be used as a point of reference
by other courts.
Even
the 17th Law Commission of India under Former SC judge, Justice M Jagannadha
Rao, in its 196th Report had earlier argued in favour of passive euthanasia
and had drafted a bill named The Medical Treatment of Terminally-ill Patients
(Protection of Patients and Medical Practitioners) Bill, 2006. The views
expressed by the Supreme Court in Aruna Shanbaug case and 17th Law Commission
was endorsed by the 19th Law Commission of India under Justice P V Reddi in its
241st Report. Active euthanasia involves taking specific steps such as
injecting the patient with a lethal substance e.g. Sodium Pentothal which
causes the person to go in deep sleep in a few seconds and the person dies
painlessly in sleep, thus it amounts to killing a person by a positive act
in order to end suffering of a person in a state of terminal illness. It is
considered illegal all over the world except where permitted by legislation. In
India too it is illegal and a crime under Section 302 or Section 304 of the
Indian Penal Code. Passive euthanasia,otherwise known as negative euthanasia,
involves withholding of medical treatment or withholding life support system
for continuance of life e.g., withholding of antibiotic where without doing it,
the patient is likely to die or removing the heart–lung machine from a patient
in coma.