http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/editorials/right-to-die-2/
Emphasising that the subject of euthanasia is fraught with questions
of "morality, religion and medical science", the Supreme Court has
widened the debate beyond the Centre's unyielding stand against it. At
the heart of the matter is whether the fundamental right to life
includes the right to die with dignity. It is to be hoped that the
process begun by the court of soliciting wider opinion from states and
UTs will shake public and political discourse out of its inhibition on
the subject and address the tricky questions of ethics and procedure
embedded not just in advanced healthcare, but also in the constant
self-interrogation that a secular, modernising society must put itself
to. So far, the courts have led the way in beginning debate on the
issue, and even the landmark Aruna Shanbaug vs Union of India judgment
of the Supreme Court in March 2011 failed to interest Parliament to
actively discuss its myriad implications. This fresh provocation
should nudge the executive and legislature out of denial. Importantly,
the signal is clear --  if they abdicate their responsibility to
respond in a progressive, humane manner, the court will deal with the
subject nevertheless.

In Aruna Shanbaug vs Union of India, the court had allowed the
possibility of "passive" euthanasia under very strict conditions.
Passive euthanasia refers to the withdrawal of treatment or life
support that could result in the patient's death, in contrast to
active euthanasia, which involves the administration of a drug to
terminate the ailing person's life. In any circumstance, the question
of when -- and how -- an ailing individual or persons acting on her
behalf can take the extraordinary step of ending life is a difficult
one. After all, when may it be said that living is so intolerable that
death would bring dignity? When may it be said that treatment, or
plain resilience, holds no hope? After all, what is tolerable for one
person may be insufferable for another. Who is to judge when a person
has her wits about her to take a call? What and how must safeguards be
framed?

To even pose these questions for medical and legal opinion is to
demand that society at large acknowledges that taking a fresh look at
the right to die is a necessary exercise in the progressive nuancing
of the right to life.


-- 
Avinash Shahi
M.Phil Research Scholar
Centre for The Study of Law and Governance
Jawaharlal Nehru University
New Delhi India



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