Friday, June 12, 2026
ADVT 
National

Five things to know about the Supreme Court's assisted dying ruling

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2015 02:11 PM

    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada has unanimously overturned its own 1993 decision and struck down a ban on providing a doctor-assisted death to mentally competent but suffering and "irremediable" patients. Here are five things to know about the decision.

    ---

    In 1993, in the Sue Rodriguez case, the court ruled 5-4 that the ban on assisted suicide was a violation of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, but was reasonable under Sec. 1 of the charter. The two cases, while similar on their face, actually pivoted on different points of constitutional law.

    ---

    In the latest case, a British Columbia judge said she was justified in revisiting Rodriguez and the Supreme Court agreed. "Trial courts may reconsider settled rulings of higher courts in two situations: (1) where a new legal issue is raised; and (2) where there is a change in the circumstances or evidence that fundamentally shifts the parameters of the debate. Here, both conditions were met."

    ---

    The high court pointed out that in 1993, assisted suicide was a rarity around the world, with some jurisdictions turning a blind eye to the practice while officially outlawing it. "By 2010, however, eight jurisdictions permitted some form of assisted dying: the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Oregon, Washington, Montana and Colombia."

    ---

    In ruling that the blanket prohibition on assisted suicide is unconstitutional, the justices suspended the decision for a year to allow the federal government to draft legislation that recognizes the right of plainly consenting adults who are enduring intolerable suffering — physical or mental — to seek medical help to end their lives.

    ---

    The decision will be a political bomb in a Parliament already counting down to an October election. Tory MP Steven Fletcher, a quadriplegic who has two private bills on assisted dying before the Commons, says the government could easily take the issue off the election radar by acting before Parliament rises in June. Justice Minister Peter MacKay says only that the government will take its time.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Explosive Fraser Valley house fire leaves two people with third-degree burns

    Explosive Fraser Valley house fire leaves two people with third-degree burns
    Two people have extensive third-degree burns after a house fire in B.C.'s eastern Fraser Valley

    Explosive Fraser Valley house fire leaves two people with third-degree burns

    TIME Person Of The Year: Modi Wins Poll, Loses Race

    TIME Person Of The Year: Modi Wins Poll, Loses Race
    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is the winner of this year's reader poll for TIME Person of the Year, but his name does not figure in the magazine editors' own list of final eight.

    TIME Person Of The Year: Modi Wins Poll, Loses Race

    Modi Needs To Show Results, Not Hype In Building India-us Ties: Shashi Tharoor

    Modi Needs To Show Results, Not Hype In Building India-us Ties: Shashi Tharoor
     Washington is "not susceptible" to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's "brand of alliterative rhetoric" like the three Ds and five Ts and was looking for "results, not hype", Congress leader Shashi Tharoor said.

    Modi Needs To Show Results, Not Hype In Building India-us Ties: Shashi Tharoor

    Haryana's Headline-Grabbing Sisters: Local Heroes Or Serial Men Beaters?

    Haryana's Headline-Grabbing Sisters: Local Heroes Or Serial Men Beaters?
    Just a week back, they were 'role models' and the darlings of the media and dial-a-quote experts who had dared to take on male tormentors in a patriarchal society in Haryana. 

    Haryana's Headline-Grabbing Sisters: Local Heroes Or Serial Men Beaters?

    Imran Khan Vows To Unleash Countrywide 'Storm'

    Imran Khan Vows To Unleash Countrywide 'Storm'
     Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) chief Imran Khan Monday vowed that a "storm" would be unleashed to "free the country from its oppressive rulers" after a party activist was killed in Faisalabad ahead of his call for a shutdown of the city, a Pakistani daily reported.

    Imran Khan Vows To Unleash Countrywide 'Storm'

    Turtles vs. turbines: Ontario's top court deciding on nine-turbine project

    Turtles vs. turbines: Ontario's top court deciding on nine-turbine project
    TORONTO — A legal battle pitting turtles against wind turbines is being heard in a packed Ontario courtroom.

    Turtles vs. turbines: Ontario's top court deciding on nine-turbine project