A plea from a son of a euthanized Belgian woman
By Alex Schadenberg, International Chair – Euthanasia Prevention CoalitionThe recent 2015 HOPE International Symposium opposing euthanasia and assisted suicide featured many excellent speakers, including Professor Tom Mortier, whose depressed mother died by euthanasia in Belgium.
Rebecca DiGirolamo interviewed Mortier at the Symposium in Australia for the Southern Cross news.
DiGirolamo’s article begins by expressing Mortier’s purpose for speaking at the Symposium in Australia.
The son of a clinically depressed
woman euthanized under Belgium’s liberal laws has warned Australian
politicians against legalizing euthanasia.
“I want to warn people by telling my story,” said Mr. Mortier, a chemistry professor in Belgium.
He said his mother was a
64-year-old woman in perfect physical health with a treatable illness
when she was killed by lethal injection in 2012 following a relationship
break-up.
He said he was not involved in
the decision making process nor was he contacted by the doctor who
euthanized her, Dr. Wim Distelmans.
The article continues by outlining the direction for euthanasia in Belgium:
Dr. Distelmans made world
headlines when he euthanized Nathan Verhelst on the grounds of
“unbearable psychological suffering” after failed sex reassignment
surgery and gave lethal injections to 45-year-old congenitally deaf
twins who were frightened they were also going blind.
In 2013, a record 1807 people
were euthanized under Belgian laws passed in 2002 (some academics
believe many more cases go unreported) – up to 60 of them suffered
mental illness. In February this year Belgium became the first country
to allow euthanasia for children.
Mr. Mortier wants Australian
politicians considering the same path to understand the impact
prescribed killing has on society’s most vulnerable, but also on those
left behind.
“I can be a father of three
children who wants to be killed by someone who wants to kill me and I
won’t have to have any more responsibility to my own children – is this
the world we want to live in? That self-determination is absolute and
that you only have to take care of yourself and you don’t have any
responsibility for others? This creates a lot, a lot of fundamental
problems,” he said.
Mr. Mortier launched a case
before the European Court of Human Rights challenging the action of Dr.
Distelmans, who killed his mother, and the Belgian euthanasia law.
Editor’s note. This appeared at alexschadenberg.blogspot.com.
Source: NRLC News
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