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Context
The right to life includes the right to live with dignity. But when there is pain is there dignity?
Question asked?
Narayan Lavate (88) and Iravati Lavate (78) from Maharashtra say that they do not wish to be a burden on society in their old age. They don’t have children and their siblings are no more, they say. They argue that spending the country’s scarce resources on keeping them alive, the old and ailing alive, is a criminal waste. This is simple logic. They also ask: What is the point in wasting money in treating old-age ailments when one has to eventually die?
YES
The Lavates’ request is unlikely to be heeded as India is not comfortable with the idea
Article 21
- Article 21 of the Constitution gives me the right to life, but I also interpret it as giving me the right to take away my life
- The right to life includes the right to live with dignity
- When you are in pain, that dignity is lost and you are forced to rely on your kith and kin for support.
Shouldn’t be an offence
- Section 309 of the Indian Penal Code prescribes punishment for attempting suicide. It is an offence, but it should not be one
- You could die, but if you survive, you should get counselling, not go to jail.
A demand driven by logic
Cultural backwardness: The couple sees the aversion to euthanasia in India as a sign of the country’s “cultural backwardness”.
- Logic not spirituality: According to Iravati, their desire to die is driven by logic, not spirituality. There is no point in living only because a legal system demands it, she says
- At the same time, they are averse to the idea of committing suicide, which is an offence in India. What if something goes wrong, they wonder
No one ready to pay attention to their request
But no one is ready to pay attention to their request. After writing letters to various Chief Ministers, legal experts like Ram Jethmalani, and Members of Parliament, all of which did not yield results, they have now written to President Ram Nath Kovind, hoping for a favourable response to their plea of “mercy death” or physician-assisted suicide.
Highly unlikely that the State will agree
- The path-breaking judgment in Aruna Shanbaug v. Union of India (2011) brought the issue of euthanasia into the public domain
- But unlike the Lavates, Aruna was in a permanently vegetative state since the brutal sexual attack on her in 1973 by a ward boy in Mumbai’s King Edward Memorial Hospital where she worked as a staff nurse.
2011 judgement
The 2011 judgment helped to push the debate to the extent of permitting passive euthanasia for terminally ill patients under the strict supervision of the High Court, in consultation with a team of doctors treating the terminally ill patient
Only passive euthanasia allowed
Passive euthanasia means withdrawing life support to induce death in a natural way
In contrast, active euthanasia means injecting legal drugs to induce death. This is not permitted in India and so the Lavates’ request is unlikely to be heeded.
Should we allow living wills?
But their letter to the President has opened up a new debate in this area. So far, the debate has been confined only to people who are terminally ill.
Living will
Countries like Canada have given legal recognition to the concept of a “living will”, where people lay down directives in advance on how they should be treated if they end up in a vegetative state
SC to take decision
- Now an important question before the courts is whether the law should allow living wills.
- The Supreme Court is likely to take a decision on living wills in 2018, even as a draft Bill on withdrawal of life support to patients with terminal illness is under consideration.
The Bill, however, deals only with terminal illness
NO
If it is allowed or legalised, there will be no limits to its abuse in India and elsewhere
Euthanasia is allowed in some countries of the European Union — Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and Belgium
- In Belgium, euthanasia is allowed in the case of terminally ill children
- In Switzerland, it is allowed only in the case of advanced malignancy or in the case of intractable pain and suffering
Clearly, even there, euthanasia is not for everybody.
- This is a complex issue in every society and the chances of its misuse are high. That’s why it is not accepted as a way of ending the lives of mentally alert and reasonably healthy persons.
A big no for the mentally alert
In the Aruna Shanbaug case, which generated a lot of debate, we have to bear in mind that Shanbaug was not in a position to take any decisions herself
For terminally ill it can be debated
In the case of terminally ill patients who are provided with expensive health care, whose families know that the patients are unlikely to return to normalcy or near-normalcy, and given the economic burden on the family and on society to treat these patients, euthanasia could be debated.
But euthanasia for those who are mentally alert, though physically disabled, is a big no
Misuse will be high
- Euthanasia in that form cannot be allowed or legalised because the probability of its misuse — whether it is demanded for property, money, or because of animosity among family members — is very high
- Usually such killings are classified as homicide, and if the perpetrators are caught, they are punished. Imagine the consequences of legalising this
Debating passive euthanasia
Passive euthanasia is partly permitted and implies withdrawing life support when a person is not mentally alert
GSC score
- Mental alertness is assessed by the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score, which tells us the level of consciousness
- In normal individuals, the score is 15, and for those who are brain dead, it is three
- A GCS score of less than eight means that the patient is not conscious, her airway is threatened, and her chances of recovery are less.
- But if the GCS score is three, the possibility of recovery is practically zero unless there is a miracle
Physically fit
- The Lavates are physically fit
- Nobody should or can allow them to die
- They can help society in many ways
This can only be debated in the context of those suffering from terminal diseases, in critical care units, facing multiple organ problems — where the courts have ruled that life support can be withdrawn only when the chances of return to life are negligible.
IT’S COMPLICATED
No legislation lays down procedure to permit a person to take her own life
The right to life is an old debate.
In case of the Emergency
When the Supreme Court heard the challenge to the imposition of Emergency, it rejected the argument that in India, the right to life available to a citizen flows from Article 21 of the Constitution, and that if such an Article were to be deleted or suspended, the citizen would have no right to his life under law.
The right to life
The right to life was made more sacrosanct and, over the years, has been seen as a basic feature of the Constitution, thereby making it both fundamental and permanent.
Relinquish only in accordance with the law: The significance of this is that if one relinquishes the right, one can do so only in accordance with procedure established by law
Example: Imposing death by way of capital punishment is an example of the right to life being terminated in accordance with the procedure established by law.
Unlawful act: To terminate life, even one’s own life, were it to be done without the authority of law, would amount to an unlawful act.
In fact, an attempt to commit suicide is a crime under the IPC.
No procedure
- At the heart of the legal problem is the fact that there exists no legislation laying down the procedure to permit a person to take her own life.
- The absence of any law governing the subject results in people taking recourse to courts to seek ‘permission’ to end their own lives, or the lives of others over whom they have some control.
Effect
- What happens now is that the courts are called upon to decide, without having the benefit of legislation to guide their decision-making
- They rely on facts and the call of their conscience
- Such ad hoc decisions suffer from arbitrariness and uncertainty — two qualities that make for bad law.
The right to choice
There is another legal dimension to this debate.
Right to live, with dignity
- Taking away life is often related to the inability of the affected or concerned individual to live with dignity.
- For instance, thousands of farmers in Vidarbha took their lives when faced with a dehumanising existence. The right to life under Article 21 has been interpreted by the Supreme Court as the right to live with dignity.
Questions
- When a person chooses to end her life because she can no longer live with dignity, the question to be asked is not whether she can waive her constitutional right to life, but whether she has a right to choice.
- The debate extends to whether the fundamental right to life extends to the right to choice, because, after all, there is no overt act required to be performed to live life
- The more abstract jurisprudence content that arises is whether there is a right to choose at all, and if there is, will it govern the right to life or be subservient to it.
The courts are yet to come up with an answer