Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Assisted Suicide Advocate Honours 'Trailblazer' For High Court Victory

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2015 11:29 AM
    VANCOUVER — An advocate for doctor-assisted suicide is celebrating the Supreme Court of Canada decision on doctor-assisted suicide by remembering the British Columbia woman whose cause he championed more than 20 years ago, when she took her dying breath.
     
    Terminally ill Victoria-area resident Sue Rodriguez chose Feb. 12, 1994 to end her life with the help of an anonymous physician.
     
    Then-federal New Democrat Svend Robinson joined her fight for assisted suicide and was with Rodriguez when she died.
     
    Robinson says today's high court decision granting all severely suffering Canadians the legal right to make the same decision is a chance to honour Rodriguez for her trailblazing efforts.
     
    Rodriguez began her legal battles for assisted suicide in 1991, saying she wanted to make her own decision about her body, which was slowly shutting down because she had ALS.
     
    Robinson, who introduced a private members' bill on physician-assisted suicide in December 1992 and now lives in Geneva, says the court decision makes him proud to be Canadian.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Polygamous Leader In B.C. Agrees To Stop Using Names Linked To Mormon Church

    Polygamous Leader In B.C. Agrees To Stop Using Names Linked To Mormon Church
    VANCOUVER — A religious leader in a small polygamous commune in southeastern British Columbia has been forbidden from using trademarks belonging to the Mormon church, which has long condemned such fundamentalist splinter groups that continue to practise multiple marriage.

    Polygamous Leader In B.C. Agrees To Stop Using Names Linked To Mormon Church

    U.K. Celebrity Chef Wins B.C. Custody Battle; Child Ordered Returned To London

    U.K. Celebrity Chef Wins B.C. Custody Battle; Child Ordered Returned To London
    VANCOUVER — A London-based celebrity chef has won an international custody battle after using child abduction laws to have his toddler returned to him from the Vancouver area.

    U.K. Celebrity Chef Wins B.C. Custody Battle; Child Ordered Returned To London

    Verdict oddity gets man off dangerous driving causing death charge

    Verdict oddity gets man off dangerous driving causing death charge
    TORONTO — A man jailed four years ago for dangerous driving causing death had his conviction quashed Wednesday because of an oddity in the jury verdict that went unnoticed at the time.

    Verdict oddity gets man off dangerous driving causing death charge

    Toronto man who killed and dismembered ex-girlfriend seeks to appeal conviction

    Toronto man who killed and dismembered ex-girlfriend seeks to appeal conviction
    TORONTO — A Toronto man who savagely killed his ex-girlfriend, hacked her body to pieces and scattered her remains is seeking to challenge his second-degree murder conviction.

    Toronto man who killed and dismembered ex-girlfriend seeks to appeal conviction

    Opposition wants Baird to denounce lashes for blogger in Saudi Arabia

    Opposition wants Baird to denounce lashes for blogger in Saudi Arabia
    OTTAWA — Opposition parties want Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird to publicly denounce the flogging of a Saudi blogger who was lashed 50 times last week after being convicted of insulting Islam.

    Opposition wants Baird to denounce lashes for blogger in Saudi Arabia

    NDP to tout its economic management skills, bash Tory record

    NDP to tout its economic management skills, bash Tory record
    OTTAWA — NDP Leader Tom Mulcair is kicking off the new year with a concerted effort to persuade Canadians that New Democrats can be trusted to manage the fragile economy.

    NDP to tout its economic management skills, bash Tory record