Two cases spark euthanasia debate

16:26 AEST Mon Apr 30 2012
AAP

The cases of two men charged with helping terminally ill relatives to end their lives have sparked a fresh debate about voluntary euthanasia in New Zealand.

Opposition politician Maryan Street is pushing legislation that would allow a person to help someone end their life without facing criminal charges.

Parliament last debated the issue in 2003 after a woman was jailed for 15 months on a charge of attempted murder after her terminally ill mother died.

Despite an outpouring of public sympathy for nurse Lesley Martin, parliament rejected a Death with Dignity bill by a 60-57 vote.

"The politicians have not had the guts to look at it again since then," Sean Davidson, told the Voluntary Euthanasia Society after being released from five months of house arrest for helping his 85-year-old cancer-ridden mother to commit suicide in October 2006.

"I broke the law, but it's a bad law and now is the time to change it," said Davidson, who gave her the lethal dose of morphine she had begged for after unsuccessfully trying to starve herself to death.

Davidson, a 50-year-old scientist, flew home on Monday to his wife and two young sons in South Africa where he heads the forensic DNA analysis laboratory at the University of the Western Cape.

Meanwhile, Evans Mott, 61, awaits trial in Auckland on a charge of aiding and abetting the December suicide of his wife, who suffered an aggressive form of multiple sclerosis.

Police allege Mott and his wife, 55, researched suicide methods and assembled a death kit three months before she asked him to leave her alone in the house.

He found her dead when he returned several hours later.

"It is truly unfortunate that in our modern society we force people to be isolated in these circumstances and then expose their loving and grieving family to the indignity of being dragged before our criminal courts in this way," his lawyer Ron Mansfield told the New Zealand Herald.

Opinion polls show up to 70 per cent of people favour a change in the law. Opponents who see voluntary euthanasia as a "slippery slope" endangering the vulnerable whom other people may want to get rid of, have so far been restrained in public comments.

Reverend John Murray, a former moderator of the Presbyterian Church, is one outspoken advocate.

"Voluntary euthanasia is not a violent, lonely, act which most suicides are, but it is recognition of the right to die, where friends and family can share the event, share in the joy and sorrow of that," he told The Dominion Post.

Conservative Prime Minister John Key has ruled out any amendment to the law before the next general election in 2014, saying that he has more important issues to deal with.

Davison said it is a debate all civilised societies should have.

"I wish the politicians would project themselves into the position of facing the ghastly situation I faced," he said. "But this debate is no longer about me, it's about the fact that an increasing number of people will find themselves in the same position."


TLC400kg man fights weight in documentary Children are developing acne at an earlier age, which puts them at risk of teasing and bullying, says a dermatologist.Childhood acne takes parents by surprise Scientists say their findings help to explain why babies who are exclusively breastfed have fewer infections than babies who are fed formula.Breastmilk fights infant infections: study Medical centres around the country won't have new stocks of the chicken pox vaccine for two weeks after a rush depleted stocks. (Thinkstock)Chicken pox jab out of stock for two weeks

Ask our experts

Should I continue my affair with a married man? Our answer SEX & RELATIONSHIPS EXPERT Dr Gabrielle Morrissey

What's your BMI?

Tools

Body Mass Index Measure your BMI >>Find out if your body is in the healthy body mass index range. Calorie CounterCalorie CounterKeep track of your daily dietary intake. Burn BarometerBurn BarometerHow much exercise should you be doing?