South Africas Law Commission has drafted a
bill which would allow doctors and others to intentionally administer lethal drugs to
patients under certain circumstances. If passed, the bill would legalize both active
euthanasia and assisted-suicide. It also authorizes doctors to stop medical treatment for
patients on artificial life support and specifies that doctors may honor patients
living wills and other advance directives.
According to the Law Commission, it drafted the bill
"to regulate end-of-life decisions and to provide for matters incidental
thereto." The commission began to study these issues in 1991 at the request of The
Living Will Society, a group advocating living wills as a means of limiting unwanted
treatment. But in 1997, the Law Commission issued a report soliciting public comments on
the prospect of legalizing euthanasia. At that time, Trudie Stohr, a spokesperson for The
Living Will Society, told reporters that the commission was going too far and that she
strongly opposed euthanasia because legalizing it would open the door to many abuses.
"Anyone who wanted to get rid of an irritating old relative may use active
euthanasia," she explained.
Others also voiced opposition. Trefor Jenkins, a
professor of Human Genetics at Wits University, relayed his assessment of South
Africas "atrocious" health care system, with only societys elite
getting care while most others rarely saw doctors. "The pattern of practice
here," he said, "is that some people when they are 65 get to see a doctor who
they have never seen before. There is no tradition of family doctors, so a trusting
relationship required for euthanasia is never set up." "People have to be seen
by different doctors every time and, in some cases, by only nurses, and in others, by
Cuban doctors who cannot even speak English," Jenkins explained. [Independent
Online, 4/4/97]
The Law Commission has acknowledged that it is
"aware of competing interests and the diversity of social, moral and ethical values
involved in the issue of active voluntary euthanasia." As a result, the commission
claims that it has "not formulated final recommendations," but instead has
submitted three "options" for "public debate and discussion." [South
African Law Commission Bulletin, 7/99]
But all three "options" are contained in
the bill itself under the heading "Active voluntary euthanasia"
giving the impression that one could choose whichever option is preferred. Only one of the
options would keep euthanasia and assisted suicide illegal. The other two options would
allow both euthanasia and assisted suicide, and would offer a choice between giving
"medical practitioners" (Option 2) or "a panel or committee" (Option
3) the power to regulate and implement the deadly practices and the authority to decide
who should or shouldnt die. [End of Life Decisions Act 1999, Option 1; Option 2,
§§ 5.(1)-(8); Option 3, §§ 5.(1)-(5)]
The commissions proposed bill has been
forwarded to South African Health Minister Manto Tshabalalla-Msimang, who recently told
parliament that euthanasia could be seen as a reasonable and justifiable limitation to the
constitutionally protected right to life. "When we speak of euthanasia," she
said, "we are speaking of the equal constitutional rights to life and to human
dignity." The question, she concluded, is whether the people should be given the
choice of ending their lives.[Independent Online, 9/9/99]
The South African Medical Association (SAMA) has
said that the euthanasia section of the proposed bill should be put on hold. Dr. Zoline
Mlisana, SAMAs chairman, explained that there is a significant difference between
active euthanasia and stopping unwanted treatment for the terminally ill. Until the public
understands that distinction, he said, the community cannot be expected to make an
informed decision on whether to legalize euthanasia and assisted suicide. "This is
equally applicable to doctors," he added. [Daily Dispatch (South Africa),
3/6/99]