Italy: Court rules assisted suicide not always a crime

Italy: Court rules assisted suicide not always a crime

Italy’s Constitutional Court has ruled it is not always a crime to assist in the death of someone experiencing “intolerable suffering”.

The country’s parliament is now expected to debate the matter, which came to the fore during the trial in Milan of an activist who helped a tetraplegic man die in Switzerland, The Local reports.

Anyone who “facilitates the suicidal intention… of a patient kept alive by life-support treatments and suffering from an irreversible pathology” should not necessarily be punished, the court ruled.

Fabiano Antoniani, known as DJ Fabo, was left a tetraplegic after a traffic accident in 2014.

Marco Cappato, a member of the Radical Party, drove Mr Antoniani to Switzerland in February 2017 where he was helped to die at the age of 40.

Mr Cappato said in a tweet: “Those who are in Fabo’s condition have the right to be helped. From today we are all more free, even those who disagree. It is a victory of civil disobedience, while the (political) parties turned their heads away.”

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