Assisted suicide proposals suggest 'some lives are no longer worth living'

Legalising assisted suicide "risks sending a message that some lives are no longer worth living", it has been warned.

Writing in The Scotsman, Michael Veitch, Parliamentary Officer of Christian advocacy group CARE for Scotland, suggested proposals to legalise assisted suicide run contrary to the care for the sick and the vulnerable shown during the pandemic.

He said it had been "one of the most heartening aspects" of the national response to Covid to see the "razor-sharp focus on reducing and preventing death, prioritising the protection of those most vulnerable to death or serious illness, namely the sick and elderly".

He said the same principle "that all life is worthy of protection" should govern the national debate over whether to introduce assisted suicide.

A Bill to legalise assisted suicide has been lodged at Holyrood by Liberal Democrat MSP Liam McArthur.

Previous attempts to change the law in Scotland have failed.

McArthur has promised "strong safeguards" to protect the vulnerable.

But the effectiveness of safeguards was questioned by Veitch because of the example of other countries which have legalised assisted suicide with restrictions only to expand their laws in subsequent years.

"While a desire to maximise autonomy over the circumstances of our death and reduce suffering may sound appealing, the proposal risks sending a message that some lives are no longer worth living," Veitch said.

"Vulnerable people may feel an anxiety not to be a burden on others, while initial 'safeguards' would likely, as has happened in Belgium and Canada, be expanded and eroded over time."

News
Prince and Princess of Wales visit Lambeth Palace to meet new Archbishop of Canterbury
Prince and Princess of Wales visit Lambeth Palace to meet new Archbishop of Canterbury

The Prince and Princess of Wales have paid an official visit to Lambeth Palace.

Pastor, daughter and son-in-law slain in Plateau state, Nigeria
Pastor, daughter and son-in-law slain in Plateau state, Nigeria

Fulani herdsmen last month killed a pastor, his daughter and her husband, leaving the couple’s 3-month-old baby with a machete wound, in Plateau state, Nigeria.

Christian group welcomes British sanctions on Iranians
Christian group welcomes British sanctions on Iranians

Britain stopped shot of designating the Revolutionary Guard a terrorist organisation.

2,000-year-old 'Pilgrim's Path' opens in Jerusalem
2,000-year-old 'Pilgrim's Path' opens in Jerusalem

An ancient road that may have been built in the days of Jesus and led up to the Jerusalem Temple Mount has been opened to the public for the first time.