Paul Lamb (pictured), who up until the lifting on an anonymity order
this week has been known only as ‘L’ (see previous reports here,
here
and here),
has won the right to join the right-to-die campaign started by Tony Nicklinson, a locked-in syndrome sufferer who died last year after an
unsuccessful court challenge.
As a result of his accident Lamb, a divorced father-of-two,
has been left with quadriplegia and has no function in any of his limbs apart
from a little movement in his right hand.
He requires 24 hour care but can speak and is able to eat, to operate a computer
and telephone using an electronic device and to control, with assistance, an
electric wheelchair.
Lamb requires a permanent urinary catheter and has pain
which is difficult to control. He now feels there are ‘too many negatives’ and
claims to be ‘worn out’ and ‘genuinely fed up’ with his life.
His case will be joined to that of Jane Nicklinson, Tony
Nicklinson’s widow, and will be heard in the Court of Appeal in the week of 13
May.
Tony Nicklinson’s
case was originally rejected by the Divisional Court in August last year and he died less than
a week later, on 22 August 2012.
Nicklinson had
argued for his GP, or another doctor, to be able to end his life on the basis
that the common law defence of ‘necessity’ was available to a charge of murder
in a case of voluntary active euthanasia provided that the Court had sanctioned
the act in advance (see more on this here).
He had also appealed to Article 8 of the European Convention (right to private and
family life).
The three
judges in the case admitted
that Nicklinson was in a ‘terrible predicament’ and described his plight as ‘deeply
moving and tragic’ but unanimously agreed that the current law did not breach his
human rights and that it was for Parliament, not the courts, to decide whether
it should be changed.`
But Paul
Bowen QC, counsel for Lamb, has
said that he will be asking for this high court decision to be set aside and
for the case to be sent back to a different panel of judges to be reconsidered.
Both Jane Nicklinson and Paul Lamb intend to advance arguments under
Article 8 and Lamb will also argue for the right to have a lethal injection on
grounds of ‘necessity’.
The key point to grasp about this case is that Lamb is
arguing not for assisted suicide (help to kill himself) but for euthanasia (giving
a doctor the power and authority actively to end his life). He claims that he
would be incapable of killing himself even with assistance (although this is in
itself questionable given that he appears to be capable of sucking with a
straw).
The case therefore threatens to drive a coach and horses
through the murder law (rather that the Suicide Act).
It could effectively create a legal precedent for anyone who, according to Tony Nicklinson's words, is suffering from 'a medical condition that causes unbearable suffering', when there are 'no alternative means available by which his suffering may be relieved', who has made a 'voluntary, clear, settled and informed decision' to end his life to be given a lethal injection by a medical doctor 'who is satisfied that his or her duty to respect autonomy and to ease the patient's suffering outweighs his or her duty to preserve life'.
That is actually a very wide category of people indeed, far wider than any category yet suggested by anyone bringing a bill before any British parliament.
It would also be easily amenable to further incremental extension through the courts. What if a person fulfils all these conditions but is not mentally competent? Or chooses not to try 'alternative means' like palliative care? Or is a minor? Or suffers from a mental illness? Or has dementia? Or could a non-doctor do it? Or might someone claim after death that the conditions applied (when the patient and key witness is already dead)? These are the sort of extensions that we are already seeing in countries like Belgium and the Netherlands which have adopted laws far less radical than this.
Is it any wonder that the Ministry of Justice, the Attorney General and the Director of Public Prosecutions are all opposing him?
It could effectively create a legal precedent for anyone who, according to Tony Nicklinson's words, is suffering from 'a medical condition that causes unbearable suffering', when there are 'no alternative means available by which his suffering may be relieved', who has made a 'voluntary, clear, settled and informed decision' to end his life to be given a lethal injection by a medical doctor 'who is satisfied that his or her duty to respect autonomy and to ease the patient's suffering outweighs his or her duty to preserve life'.
That is actually a very wide category of people indeed, far wider than any category yet suggested by anyone bringing a bill before any British parliament.
It would also be easily amenable to further incremental extension through the courts. What if a person fulfils all these conditions but is not mentally competent? Or chooses not to try 'alternative means' like palliative care? Or is a minor? Or suffers from a mental illness? Or has dementia? Or could a non-doctor do it? Or might someone claim after death that the conditions applied (when the patient and key witness is already dead)? These are the sort of extensions that we are already seeing in countries like Belgium and the Netherlands which have adopted laws far less radical than this.
Is it any wonder that the Ministry of Justice, the Attorney General and the Director of Public Prosecutions are all opposing him?
Paul Lamb is proposing a far-reaching legal change that would remove legal
protection from a large number of vulnerable elderly, disabled and sick people. How many of these could then feel pressure, whether real or imagined, to end their lives so as
not to be a financial or emotional burden on others? The so called right to die can so easily become the duty to die.
There are also many people who already stand to gain financially
or emotionally from the death of particular elderly or disabled family members
and they do not need encouragement. This is why the present law is necessary.
Through the penalties it holds in reserve it acts as a powerful disincentive to
exploitation and abuse whilst giving some prosecutorial and judicial discretion
in hard cases. It provides the best balance and does not need changing.
Furthermore, a time of economic recession, when many families are already under pressure from rising costs, unemployment and benefit cuts and health budgets are being squeezed, is the very worst time to be considering such a change in the UK.
Furthermore, a time of economic recession, when many families are already under pressure from rising costs, unemployment and benefit cuts and health budgets are being squeezed, is the very worst time to be considering such a change in the UK.
We need also to take warning from the rapid incremental
extension of euthanasia observed in both Belgium and the Netherlands, two
European jurisdictions which have legalised it since 2000.
In the Netherlands cases of euthanasia have increased 15-20%
every year since 2006 and in Belgium there was an
increase of over 4,600% between 2002 and 2011. And there is now pressure to
liberalise the law even further.
More than that, as the Ministry of Justice has already argued, Parliament
and not the courts is the proper place to be making such serious decisions. But
parliamentary measures attempting to legalise assisted suicide have already been
rejected three times by British Parliaments since 2006 over concerns about
public safety.
They have also been strongly opposed by medical bodies including
the BMA and Royal Colleges along with every major disability rights
organisation in the UK.
That is precisely why this current campaign is being waged via the
courts. Lamb’s legal team would like the courts to examine ‘the substantive
evidence’ and make a decision that is actually the proper province of
parliament. This is because they believe that the courts provide an easier path to fulfilling their agenda.
It is noteworthy that Dignity in Dying, the former Voluntary
Euthanasia Society, is not backing this case because Lamb is not terminally ill
and is seeking euthanasia rather than assisted suicide. Even they see as far too
big a step.
Instead Lamb is being supported by the British Humanist
Association, which has a far more radical agenda and is intervening on his
behalf.
The lifting of Lamb’s anonymity order has effectively passed
him the campaigning baton previously held by Nicklinson and the launch of the
campaign has been timed to have maximal impact leading up to the Court case in
May and the launch of Lord
Falconer’s new assisted dying bill in the same month.
Campaigners also know that giving the campaign as human face will
help to gain public support for a change that would otherwise be unthinkable.
There will be very few people who will not feel sympathy for
Paul Lamb, but we must not allow ourselves to be swayed by his tragic personal
circumstances into welcoming a legal change that would have such dangerous
repercussions for so many vulnerable elderly and disabled people.
Despite the media hype, the Court of Appeal should give
Lamb’s high profile campaign the same short shrift that the Divisional Court
gave Tony Nicklinson.
There will be very few people who will not feel sympathy for Paul Lamb, but we must not allow ourselves to be swayed by his tragic personal circumstances........
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