Link to the Council of Canadians with Disabilities Media Release.
Anxiety in the disability community has been heightened by the Supreme Court of Canada decision to allow an appeal of the British Columbia Court of Appeal (BCCA) ruling in Carter v. Canada (assisted suicide). "The ongoing efforts to achieve assisted suicide by any means are escalating the level of anxiety experienced by people with disabilities. Imagine the emotional toll it takes on people with disabilities who keep hearing from assisted suicide campaigners that people who experience problems with toileting, feeding and other activities of daily living should have help to die," states Tony Dolan, CCD Chairperson.
Anxiety in the disability community has been heightened by the Supreme Court of Canada decision to allow an appeal of the British Columbia Court of Appeal (BCCA) ruling in Carter v. Canada (assisted suicide). "The ongoing efforts to achieve assisted suicide by any means are escalating the level of anxiety experienced by people with disabilities. Imagine the emotional toll it takes on people with disabilities who keep hearing from assisted suicide campaigners that people who experience problems with toileting, feeding and other activities of daily living should have help to die," states Tony Dolan, CCD Chairperson.
“I have an excellent job, four
university degrees and I am very happily married. Yet, every time this issue
emerges, as a disabled person I feel vulnerable. It is as if we have to
continually justify our existence,” states Nancy Hansen, a member of CCD's
Ending of Life Ethics Committee.
The Council
of Canadians with Disabilities (CCD) and the Canadian Association for Community
Living (CACL), two of Canada’s largest organizations representing persons with
disabilities and their families, had hoped the appeal would be denied. "Circumstances in Canada have not
changed so much in the intervening years since the Rodriguez decision to
require this issue to be revisited by the SCC," states Dolan. ”If
anything, the justification is weaker because of improvements in palliative
care”.
"Moreover
on 21 April 2010, Parliament opposed by a vote of 228 to 59 a bill to legalize
assisted suicide. Our legislators, who are close to grassroots Canadians, got
the threat that assisted suicide poses to the elderly and people with
disabilities and said no to assisted suicide. It is our view that the existing Supreme Court precedent Rodriguez and 2010 Parliamentary
decision reflect how the law should stand on this issue."
In documents filed with the SCC, CCD and CACL
urged the SCC to refuse leave to appeal Carter.
CCD and CACL expressed concern about the inadequacy of the evidentiary record,
because the BC Supreme Court did not have the benefit of hearing sufficiently
from experts who had considered the perils posed to people with disabilities by
legalized assisted suicide. By default,
the burden now has fallen to people with disabilities and their organizations
to ensure that the SCC is sufficiently informed about the dangers inherent in
legalized assisted suicide for people with
disabilities and seniors. In the coming
weeks, CCD and CACL will adduce how best to achieve this goal.
CACL and CCD
are engaging in the legal proceedings in the Carter case in an effort to uphold
the Supreme Court of Canada’s ruling in Rodriguez. The Supreme Court of Canada in the Rodriguez
case got our message. They were entirely
focused on the threat to persons with disabilities and thus denied Sue
Rodriguez’s request for assistance to end her life.
"CACL
and CCD take hope from the Irish Supreme Court, which in Fleming –v. Ireland refused to legalize
assisted suicide in 2013. In the Fleming
case, the Irish Court considered the evidence upon which Justice Smith based
her ruling but had the additional crucial evidence that was not available to
her,” states Dolan. They reached the exact opposite conclusion, holding that
the concerns of the disabled community about the dangers posed by legalizing
assisted suicide are well founded. "We are hopeful that the SCC's final word on the Carter case will
echo the Irish Court's conclusion that" [114.] the
values of autonomy and dignity and more importantly the rights in which they
find expression, do not extend to a right of assisted suicide."
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To arrange an interview with CCD representatives contact:
Laurie
Beachell at: 204-981-6179 or 204-947-0303 or
Amy Hasbrouck (Toujours Vivant/Not Dead Yet, a project of CCD) 450-921-3057 or
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