New Drive for Euthanasia Revives Bitter Debate in Europe
Assisted death of Belgian twins who weren’t terminally ill reflects changing laws
By Jonathan Luxmoore - OSV Newsweekly, 2/10/2013
At
a small Quaker hall in the prosperous small town of Charlbury, England,
just north of Oxford, 30 residents listen politely as Sir Terence
English, retired head of the prestigious British Medical Association,
drily sets out his wares.
An Assisted Dying Bill permitting
euthanasia is due to be debated shortly in Britain’s House of Lords. The
meeting, organized by Dignity in Dying, is just one of many taking
place locally to drum up public support.
With similar laws now pending in several countries, Catholic Church representatives are urging caution.
“For
our Church’s magisterium, the beginning and end of life represent
non-negotiable values,” Thierry Bonaventura, media officer of the
Council of European Bishops Conferences (CCEE), told Our Sunday Visitor.
“Yet the issues surrounding euthanasia are often quite technical and
hard to understand, especially when not all governments and parliaments
appear much open to public dialogue on them. Very often, it comes down
to the consciences of individual doctors.”
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