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TV station defends showing man's suicide


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Swiss groups aids suicide
Ewert chokes down the lethal cocktail, slurping apple juice through a pink straw to blot out the taste as the ninth movement of Beethoven’s symphony plays in the background. His wife holds his hand as he begins dying.

Dignitas, a well-known assisted suicide group in Switzerland, where suicide is legal in some circumstances, aided Ewert.

The group’s founder Ludwig A. Minelli said the presence of cameras and filmmakers did not in any way influence Ewert’s decision.

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“Ewert, because of his illness and his declared intent right from the start to shorten his own suffering, never once considered the possibility of abandoning his assisted suicide,” said Minelli.

The case came up during the prime minister’s question time Wednesday when legislator Phil Willis, who represents Ewert’s district, complained that the film promoted a crime.

He asked Brown if the prime minister believed the show was “in the public interest” or simply a case of “distasteful voyeurism.”

Brown did not venture an opinion, saying only that the government’s “television watchdogs” will scrutinize the show after it is broadcast.

Public opinion polls suggest that 80 percent of Britons believe the law should be changed to allow a doctor to end a patient’s life in a case like Ewert’s, but opposition from influential religious groups remains strong and the anti-suicide law remains in place.

More on Assisted suicide  |  Britain

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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