The Bishops' Conference of Colombia has rejected a proposed law on
euthanasia and assisted suicide currently being debated and said the
country “has not been told the truth” about the measure.
After “attentive study, the Catholic Church wishes to express its total
disagreement with the bill and its deep concern about the abuses that
could result from its possible enactment,” the bishops said in a Nov. 21
statement.
“The promoters of the law have repeatedly hidden from the public the
serious implications and intentions of their proposal. There is nothing
pious or humanitarian about it.”
Despite supporters' arguments that the law will protect the rights of
the sick, it instead “defends shadowy ideological and economic
interests,” the bishops said.
For example, they noted, the proposed law does not limit itself to
“regulating” the 1997 ruling by Colombia's Constitutional Court that
decriminalized euthanasia.
“That ruling did not legalize euthanasia in Colombia, but rather was
limited to decriminalizing one specific case: that of a terminally ill
patient who voluntarily and repeatedly, of his own free will, asks his
attending physician for an early end to his life in order to avoid pain
and suffering.”
“The current bill establishes motives, criteria and procedures that
contradict even those contemplated by the Constitutional Court,” the
bishops warned.
Article five of the law, additionally, “would legalize non-voluntary
euthanasia, that is, that which is carried out without the express
consent of the patient.”
In their remarks, the bishops insisted that the bill is ultimately “a
grave attack on the right to life and the health of all Colombians,
especially the poorest and most disadvantaged.”