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Euthanasia law comes into effect in first Australia state

Assisted suicide is illegal in most countries and was banned in Australia until Victoria state introduced laws to legalise the practice in 2017.

News Desk (Agence France-Presse)
Sydney, Australia
Wed, June 19, 2019

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Euthanasia law comes into effect in first Australia state Supporters hang balloons and posters in support of British toddler Alfie Evans, on a bus-stop opposite Alder Hey childrens hospital in Liverpool, north-west England on April 26, 2018. Alfie Evans, who is 22 months old, has a rare degenerative neurological condition which has not been definitively diagnosed. His parents, Tom Evans and Kate James, have fought a legal battle to stop the Alder Hey Children's Hospital in Liverpool, north-west England, from turning off his ventilator. (AFP/Oli Scarff)

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uthanasia laws for terminally ill patients came into effect in Australia's second-most populous state in a "bold change" Wednesday, the only place in the nation where the practice will be legal.

Assisted suicide is illegal in most countries and was banned in Australia until Victoria state introduced laws to legalise the practice in 2017.

Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews -- who supported the bill after the death of his father in 2016 -- said the laws were about giving patients a "dignified option at the end of their life".

"We've taken a compassionate approach to give to people that choice... that dignity for hopefully a good death which is a really important part of a good quality of life as well," Andrews told commercial broadcaster Channel Nine.

"This is bold change. No other state has done this... but we think this is the right step to take."

The scheme will be accessible only to terminally ill adult patients with less than six months to live, or one year for sufferers of conditions such as motor neurone disease and multiple sclerosis.

There are multiple safeguards, including an independent review board and a coroner who will track and monitor all deaths.

Andrews said about 12 people were expected to use the laws this year and up to 150 each year after that.

Other states in Australia have debated assisted dying in the past, but the proposals have always been defeated.

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