UPDATE, DECEMBER 9, 2011:
A British woman has told Sky News (UK) that she left her home country and went to Switzerland in order to die with dignity. She suffered cancer, but could not die on her own terms in the United Kingdom.
There it is either illegal outright or, as in Scotland, the laws are uncertain and provide no peace of mind legally for any family members who may help a loved one die.
Instead, Geraldine McClelland, 61, travelled to the Swiss Dignitas euthanasia clinic where doctors are legally able to assist suicide.
“I would like to die where and when I want to die with the people around me that I choose,” she said.
It’s important for my family to be with me. And that’s a difficult thing to do in England. You have to go somewhere else
It’s too late to change the law for me, but please, if you care about this issue at all please make our voices heard. I appreciate that it is a difficult subject, but when dying cannot be avoided, let us be compassionate enough and tolerant enough to respect choice.
“It’s become about paperwork, photocopiers, is my printer working? I should be looking deeply within my soul about what my life has been and I haven’t been able to do so because that time has been taken away from me by our system – and it needs to change.”
Geraldine died on Wednesday.
Here’s the story Mamamia originally ran about an Australian who faced court for helping his partner die:
David Mathers placed a pillow over the face of his partner and smothered her.
Yesterday he told court: “I finished what she’d started, didn’t I.”
His partner Eva was chronically ill and had twice in 48 hours attempted suicide by over-dosing on anti-depressants.
David said he agonised over the decision. He wanted her alive. But he couldn’t bear to see her in agony. It’s an impossible choice but in the end, he killed her. Humanely. The judge wholly suspended his sentence because, it was noted, he acted out of ‘selfless love’.
It’s a right to die many argue should exist in Australia. And it did for a very short while.
Robert Dent was 66 when the lethal dose of barbiturates passed into his system after he entered the command on a laptop. It was assisted suicide and he was sick. He was the first person in Australia, and one of only three, to die lawfully under the Northern Territory’s Rights of the Terminally Ill Act 1995. A short time later the Australian Government amended the Northern Territory (Self Government) Act, effectively making euthanasia illegal.