DutchNews, January 30, 2020 - By
Senay Boztas
New research commissioned by the Dutch government has found that
around 10,000 people of 55 and over have a serious death wish.
The Van
Wijngaarden commission, tasked with looking into how many people might want
euthanasia because they simply no longer wish to go on living, said 0.18% of
people over 55 would like to die.
In a briefing to MPs, health minister Hugo de
Jonge wrote: ‘There is no doubt that the results show this is a major social
issue both for this government and for society. This group of people’s death
wish is serious and the report underlines the need for action.’
De Jonge, a
Christian Democrat MP and also deputy prime minister, said government policies
should do everything possible to ‘help these people find meaning in life
again’.
However, the report is set to divide the coalition government, which unites
the liberal VVD, two Christian parties and the liberal democratic D66.
Pia
Dijkstra, who leads on ethical issues for D66, immediately announced that she
would next month submit a private members’ bill calling for a new ‘completed
life’ law to allow people over 75 without unbearable medical conditions to
request euthanasia. ‘Studies show there is broad support for people to manage a
dignified end to their own lives,’ she said on Twitter.
However, De Jonge said
in his briefing that the death wish ‘is not static’ and so the answers would
not be found in broadening euthanasia legislation or introducing new rules.
ChristenUnie MP Carla Dik-Faber told the NOS broadcaster that her party
fiercely opposed such legislation too. ‘Making a suicide pill available would
be the most cynical response to people with a death wish,’ she reportedly said.
‘We would be giving up on them instead of wanting to be there for them.’

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