
From Belgium to Canada, Euthanasia Signals a Deep Crisis of Meaning
Nobody should be offered death as the solution to suffering In 2002, Belgium and the Netherlands became the first countries to legalize euthanasia. Since then,
Nobody should be offered death as the solution to suffering In 2002, Belgium and the Netherlands became the first countries to legalize euthanasia. Since then,
ADF International today filed a complaint requesting the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention to declare Yahaya Sharif-Aminu’s prosecution contrary to international law.
In March 2023, Canada will expand its already shockingly broad MAiD, or Medical Assistance in Dying, law, to make death-on-demand available to Canadians—including so-called ‘mature minors’—suffering from mental illness.
European Court of Human Rights rules that Belgium failed to conduct proper investigation into circumstances of the 2012 euthanasia of Godelieva de Troyer
The European Court of Human Rights is set to rule on landmark euthanasia case Tom Mortier v. Belgium. The case highlights the dangers of legalising euthanasia, and demonstrates that so-called ‘safeguards’ cannot make safe the practice of intentionally ending a life.
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