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SPUC's Alison Davis finds the euthanasia hole in World Suicide Prevention Day |
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John Smeaton, SPUC directorThursday, 6 October 2011 SPUC's Alison Davis finds the euthanasia hole in World Suicide Prevention DayAlison Davis, leader of No Less Human, a group within SPUC, has written an open letter to the organisers of last week's World Suicide Prevention Day (WSPD): Dear Sirs, I found out, only on the day itself that the World Suicide Prevention Day (WSPD) was held on Saturday 10th September 2011. I feel it is a great pity that information about the Day was not more widely disseminated, since I would have liked to have had the chance to comment on the Day and the literature associated with it, before the event actually happened. I did notice some comments in your literature which would appear pertinent to the paragraph above. Not least, you give examples of activities which can support WSPD, which include "holding depression awareness events in public places, and offering screening for depression." No such care is taken over prospective victims (so-called "volunteers") of "assisted suicide" though it seems very likely that many if not most of them will be suffering depression to some degree. I would like to give you a personal example of such a case, and solicit your opinion on it. I note two further comments in your WSPD brochure which have relevance here. You say that we must "educate the media on how to report suicide responsibly." This is most definitely not being done at present in the UK. Indeed, we are constantly bombarded by TV programmes and media reports on how "merciful" such killings are, and how the perpetrators are heroes rather than killers, and thus ought to be praised, not prosecuted. Will you be doing anything to alter this state of affairs? Finally you say that "suicide prevention is everybody's business." May I ask what you are doing to prevent the suicide of sick and disabled people like me, which is being heavily promoted not only in the UK but also in many European countries, in some of which it is already legal? In failing to address assisted suicide the organisers of the World Suicide Prevention Day have ignored the major threat to all vulnerable people who are contemplating suicide. Alison showed how vulnerable people can easily come be influenced by the determined agenda of the euthanasia lobby when she pointed out in her recent analysis of the Tony Nicklinson case that the statement which was supposed to represent the personal wishes of Mr Nicklinson was in fact largely lifted from Dignity in Dying (formerly the Voluntary Euthanasia Society). When we see in some sections of society a push for the legalisation of assisted suicide on such grounds as tiredness and loneliness, how can a group working to prevent suicide ignore such an insidious threat to the lives of vulnerable people? To receive this news regularly, visit http://www.spuc.org.uk/em-signup. The reliability of the news herein is dependent on that of the cited sources, which are paraphrased rather than quoted. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the society. © Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, 2011 |
© Society for the Protection of Unborn Children 2011 |
Were there to be no support in the whole history of ethical and moral thought, were there no acknowledged confirmation from medical science, were the history of legal opinion to the contrary, we would still have to conclude on the basis of God's Holy Word that the unborn child is a person in the sight of God. He is protected by the sanctity of life graciously given to each individual by the Creator, Who alone places His image upon man and grants them any right to life which they have.