July 17, 2015 (AlexSchadenberg) — Yesterday, the European Court of Human Rights rejected a case to overturn Britain's assisted suicide law.
The case was brought to the Court of Human Rights in Strasburg by Jane Nicklinson, the widow of Tony Nicklinson, a man who had lived with locked-in syndrome and Paul Lamb who had become paralyzed in an accident.
In rejecting the case, the European Court of Human Rights stated that:
the UK Parliament was “best placed” to rule on such a sensitive issue.
On June 25, 2014; the UK Supreme Court also rejected an attempt by Nicklinson and Lamb to overturn the laws protecting people from assisted suicide. Not Dead Yet UK spokesperson, Kevin Fitzpatrick, responded to the UK Supreme Court decision by stating:
Euthanasia and assisted suicide are profoundly dangerous, irrespective of such hard cases, not least because they pose a very grave risk to thousands of disabled people who have been made vulnerable by cuts in health and social care services and welfare benefits, making some feel they would be better off dead and no longer a burden on their family and friends.
The British House of Commons will be debating a bill to legalize assisted suicide this fall.
Not Dead Yet UK recently sent a letter to Prime Minister David Cameron explaining why they oppose assisted suicide and organized a rally featuring an excellent speech by disability leader and actress Liz Carr.
Reprinted with permission from Euthanasia Prevention Coalition.