An elderly couple have announced their plans to die in the world's first
'couple' euthanasia - despite neither of them being terminally
ill.Instead the pair fear loneliness if the other one dies first from
natural causes.Identified only by their first names, Francis, 89, and
Anne, 86, they have the support of their three adult children who say
they would be unable to care for either parent if they became widowed.
Francis has received treatment for prostate cancer for 20 years and is unable to spend a day without morphine and Anne is partially blind and almost totally deaf.They always go out shopping together because they are both scared that one day the other will not return home.
They decided that life in a care home was not an option because of their fear they would end up bedridden without the strength to insist on euthanasia.
They are also afraid that a good retirement home would cost more than
their combined pensions and that they would have to dig into their
savings to afford it.
They planned to commit suicide on February 3 next year, their 64th
wedding anniversary, by placing plastic bags over their heads after
taking an overdose of sleeping pills.
Francis told Moustique, a Belgian online news service,
'We want to go together because we both fear of the future,' said Francis. 'It's as simple as this: we are afraid of what lies ahead.'Fear of being alone and above all, fear of the consequences of loneliness.'It takes courage to jump from the 20th floor and I am unable even if I wanted to do it,'It takes courage to hang, it takes courage to jump into the canal. But a doctor who makes you a shot and lets you gently fall asleep? It does not take courage.'Without our son and our daughter, it would never have succeeded,''We are not sad, we are happy,'. 'When we were told we could leave life together smoothly we were on a little cloud. It was as if we had spent all that time in a tunnel and suddenly we came into the light again.'John Paul said the double euthanasia of his parents was the 'best solution'.
'If one of them should die, who would remain would be so sad and totally dependent on us,' he said. 'It would be impossible for us to come here every day, take care of our father or our mother.'
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