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Ecuador legalises Euthanasia for incurably sick patients
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  • Ecuador legalises Euthanasia for incurably sick patients

Ecuador legalises Euthanasia for incurably sick patients

FP Staff • February 8, 2024, 11:11:39 IST
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The court ruling stated that a doctor who performs an active euthanasia procedure to preserve a patient’s right to a dignified life is not subject to the penalty for homicide

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Ecuador legalises Euthanasia for incurably sick patients

Euthanasia was made legal in Ecuador on Wednesday, making it the second country in Latin America to do so. This decision was made in response to a lawsuit filed by an incurably sick patient. The country’s Constitutional Court allowed doctors to assist a terminally ill person in passing away without facing legal repercussions, with seven of its nine judges voting in favor of the decision. The court ruling stated that a doctor who performs an active euthanasia procedure to preserve a patient’s right to a dignified life is not subject to the penalty for homicide. Paola Roldan filed the lawsuit in August. She is a patient with Lou Gehrig’s disease, also known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a progressive neurological condition. In her complaint, Roldan contested an article of the Ecuadorian penal code, which considers the procedure a homicide carrying a sentence of between 10 and 13 years in prison. “I want to rest in peace. What I experience is painful, lonely and cruel,” Roldan, who is bedridden, told a court hearing in November via video link. Following the ruling, she told a news conference that Ecuador is “a little more welcoming, freer and more dignified.” “The fight for human rights is never a paved road,” she said. Ecuador follows in the footsteps of Colombia, which decriminalized euthanasia in 1997. Lawmakers in Uruguay and Chile are currently debating the issue, while Mexico has a so-called “good death” law, which lets the patient or their family opt out of life support. After studying Roldan’s arguments, the court in this traditionally conservative, majority-Catholic nation ruled that “it would be unreasonable to impose an obligation to stay alive on someone who is going through this situation.” “Every human being can make free and informed decisions when their personal development is affected, which… includes the option of ending the intense suffering caused by a serious and irreversible bodily injury or a serious and incurable illness,” it said. The court tasked the Health Ministry with drafting regulations for the procedure within two months. For its part, the Ombudsman’s office would have to draft a bill on euthanasia within six months to be approved by Congress within a year. But Roldan’s lawyer Farith Simon on Wednesday insisted in a post on X, formerly Twitter, that “the sentence is immediately enforceable.” Roldan’s father told reporters that he had mixed feelings about the outcome of the case. There is the “satisfaction that Paola has been able to achieve a historic event, it is a legacy for Ecuadorian society,” he said. But his family has a “half-broken heart because there could be an outcome… which is the death of my daughter,” he added. “We are supporting Paola.” Writing on social media Friday, when she learned that her case before the high court was in the final stage, Roldan said: “Several times I thought that I would not be able to see the fruits of this lawsuit, like someone who plants a tree so that someone else can sit under its shadow.” (with inputs from AFP)

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