Is the slippery slope at work in Belgium?

Michael Cook
11 Dec 2011
Reproduced with Permission
MercatorNet

The "slippery slope" is often derided as a logical fallacy. But when one of the leading advocacy groups for euthanasia in Belgium posts an article entitled "Euthanasie: tijd voor de volgende stap, Euthanasia, time for the next step", it's hard not to think that it may not be so illogical after all.

The Humanistisch-Vrijzinnige Vereniging (Humanist-Liberal Association) complains that eligibility for euthanasia is far too restrictive. At the moment, only people with unbearable suffering can be euthanased. This leaves out people in irreversible comas, people with dementia, people with irreversible brain diseases and people who are under 18. This is manifestly unfair, the HVV contends.

However, this is not just a private initiative. In November Wim Distelmans, the chairman of the official Federal Committee on Euthanasia, released an open letter to Prime Minister Elio Di Rupo asking him to re-open a national debate on euthanasia. (At the time, Di Rupo was pulling a government together (this took 589 days) but now he is officially prime minister.) He and eight colleagues, like the HVV, have asked the Belgian government to update its 2002 euthanasia law. The proposed changes include these provisions:


Top