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French Senate defeats euthanasia
bill by 170 to 142.
Editor’s note. This appeared today on the blog of the Euthanasia
Prevention Coalition at
http://alexschadenberg.blogspot.com/2011/01/french-senate-defeats-euthanasia-bill.html
Last night the Senate in France
defeated a bill to legalize euthanasia by a vote of 170 to 142.
The euthanasia bill was sponsored
in the French Senate by Jean-Pierre Godefroy (Parti Socialiste),
Alain Fouché (UMP) and François Autain and Guy Fischer (Parti
communiste-Parti de gauche).
The bill would have allowed
euthanasia for people with disabilities, those with chronic
conditions and people who are defined as terminal.
Prime Minister François Fillon
spoke out against the euthanasia bill a few days earlier. Mr
Fillion said that:
although he had never had to face the nightmare of living with
someone as they died, he was still against a law allowing
actively helping someone to die.
He thought such a law would not
fit in with the “basic values of our society” and that to
legislate giving the right to end someone’s life was a limit “we
should not go beyond.” He said it was also “very dangerous” as
it did not allow for any consultation with the family.
Mr Fillon said the debate should
also take account of the actions taken since 2008 by Nicolas
Sarkozy who has made the care of terminally ill people “an
absolute priority.”
That had led to the development
of a palliative care programme that has seen the creation of
1,200 new beds and the start, last March, of specific financial
aid to allow families to care for terminally ill loved ones.
A recent poll in France found
that:
- 52% of the respondents thought
that legalizing euthanasia would include a "risk of abuse."
- 60% of the respondents thought
that France should make the development of palliative care a
priority before considering the legalization of euthanasia,
while 38% thought that France should legalize euthanasia.
The concerns of the French
citizen is well founded. Recent studies in Belgium found in the
Flanders region that 32% of the euthanasia deaths were done
without explicit request or consent and another study found that
47.8% of the euthanasia deaths were not reported.
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