MS sufferer wins assisted suicide case

Thu Jul 30, 2009 11:25pm BST
 
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By Farah Master

LONDON (Reuters) - A multiple sclerosis sufferer who feared her husband would be prosecuted if she went abroad to end her life won a legal bid on Thursday to force the government to clarify the law on assisted suicide.

The law says helping someone to commit suicide is a crime that carries a maximum sentence of 14 years in prison.

However, since 1992, about 100 British citizens have ended their lives at the Dignitas facility in Switzerland, where assisted suicide is legal, without their relatives being prosecuted.

Debbie Purdy, 46, from Bradford, wanted to force the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) to give assurances her husband would not be prosecuted if he helped her go to a euthanasia facility overseas.

Wheelchair-bound Purdy had been worried that her professional musician husband Omar Puente would be treated harshly by the authorities.

On Thursday, the House of Lords unanimously ruled that the failure to clarify the law infringed her human rights.

"I'm ecstatic. It's like having a life back," Purdy told reporters after the verdict. "All five Lords allowed the appeal and that just seems incredible.

"This decision means that I can make an informed choice, with Omar, about whether he travels abroad with me to end my life because we will know exactly where we stand,"  Continued...

 
Chancellor Alistair Darling attends a cabinet meeting in Nottingham, November 20, 2009.   REUTERS/Andrew Winning
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