“Robert Badinter would have supported this text” on assisted dying, assures Elisabeth Badinter

“Robert Badinter would have supported this text” on assisted dying, assures Elisabeth Badinter

2024-04-21 08:08:11
Republican guards carry the coffin of former Minister of Justice Robert Badinter during a national tribute ceremony in his honor in front of the Ministry of Justice, on Place Vendôme, in Paris, February 14, 2024. THIBAULT CAMUS / AFP

As the work of the special commission responsible for preparing the examination at first reading in the National Assembly, from May 27, of the bill relating to the support of the sick and the end of life begins on Monday, the philosopher Elisabeth Badinter wanted to assure, in a letter published Sunday April 21 by The Tribunethat her husband, the former Minister of Justice Robert Badinter, would have voted for the text.

In this missive addressed to Olivier Falorni, the deputy (MoDem and Independents) of Charente-Maritime, appointed to the post of general rapporteur, Ms. Badinter denies the argument of the opponents of the text, who cite in particular a sentence from her late husband pronounced on September 16, 2008 before a mission on end of life at the National Assembly: “No one can take life away from others in a democracy. »

“I was able to see that my husband’s words were used, not to say exploited, by opponents of any legislative development on this subject”she writes, adding: “My husband has never equated assisted dying with the death penalty (…). If he had been a parliamentarian, Robert Badinter would have supported this text. To pretend otherwise would be a betrayal of his thoughts and his memory. »

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“The conviction that a move towards active assistance in dying was acceptable”

Regarding this statement made by Robert Badinter in 2008, the philosopher insists: “ It was in 2008, sixteen years ago now. The characteristic of human thought is to be able to question itself, to want to move forward, to know how to evolve. (…) Robert Badinter was one of those men who refused to be locked into certainties, especially on an issue as complex and sensitive as that of the end of life. »

And to continue: “He also told you personally [Mme Badinter s’adresse à M. Falorni] when he received you on November 10, 2021 (…). He reiterated his position in my presence (…) in September 2023. While the parliamentary debate on the end of life is now launched, I would like to strongly affirm this. (…) Over the years, my husband formed the conviction that a move towards active assistance in dying was acceptable and even desirable in certain circumstances and under conditions precisely defined by law. »

The bill opens, under strict conditions, the possibility of assisted suicide for certain patients at the end of their life, and, when they are incapable of carrying out the fatal gesture, to do it for them. The very principle of this “assisted death” – a term preferred to “assisted suicide” or “euthanasia” – but also the practical modalities of its implementation, promise intense parliamentary debates.

According to the text presented to the Council of Ministers on April 10, assistance in dying will be reserved for adult patients, born in France or residing in the country for a long time, and able to clearly express their wishes. The text “excludes psychiatric illnesses”, specified in particular the Minister of Labor, Health and Solidarity, Catherine Vautrin. The person concerned must also experience suffering, physical or psychological, intolerable and impossible to treat. Finally, the “vital prognosis” must be undertaken in the short or medium term.

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The responsibility of caregivers will be central. Once a patient requests assisted suicide, it will be up to a doctor to decide following a procedure giving him up to fifteen days. He will do it alone, even if he will have to consult another doctor and a nurse. In other words, it will not be a decision “college”contrary to what Emmanuel Macron announced in March.

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