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Noel Conway: Terminally-ill man loses assisted dying challenge | Noel Conway: Terminally-ill man loses assisted dying challenge |
(35 minutes later) | |
A terminally-ill man who wants to be helped to die has lost his legal challenge at the Court of Appeal. | A terminally-ill man who wants to be helped to die has lost his legal challenge at the Court of Appeal. |
Noel Conway, 68, who has motor neurone disease, has fought a legal battle for the right to a "peaceful and dignified" death. | Noel Conway, 68, who has motor neurone disease, has fought a legal battle for the right to a "peaceful and dignified" death. |
The retired lecturer challenged an earlier High Court rejection of his case at a hearing in May. | |
Mr Conway, from Shrewsbury, said he now intends to take his fight to the Supreme Court. | |
His case was rejected on Wednesday by three senior judges - Master of the Rolls Sir Terence Etherton, Sir Brian Leveson and Lady Justice King. | His case was rejected on Wednesday by three senior judges - Master of the Rolls Sir Terence Etherton, Sir Brian Leveson and Lady Justice King. |
Mr Conway is dependent on a ventilator for up to 23 hours a day and only has movement in his right hand, head and neck. | |
He wanted help to die when he has less than six months left to live, still has the mental capacity to decide, and has made a "voluntary, clear, settled and informed" decision. | |
Mr Conway proposed he could only receive assistance to die if a High Court judge determined he met all three of those criteria. | |
Speaking after the ruling he said: "I will keep fighting for myself and all terminally-ill people who want the right to die peacefully, with dignity and on our own terms." | |
He said his current options are to "effectively suffocate" by removing his ventilator, or spend thousands travelling to Switzerland to end his life and have his family risk prosecution. | |
'Weak and vulnerable' | |
Sir Terence said the court concluded it was not as well-placed as Parliament to determine the "necessity and proportionality of a blanket ban". | |
He also said the High Court had seen evidence Mr Conway's proposed scheme was "inadequate to protect the weak and vulnerable". | |
It also failed to give enough weight to the "sanctity of life and to the scheme's potential to undermine trust and confidence as between doctors and patients", he added. | |
The appeal was opposed by the Secretary of State for Justice, David Gauke, with Humanists UK, Care Not Killing and Not Dead Yet UK also making submissions. | |
Dr Peter Saunders, campaign director of Care Not Killing, said the Court of Appeal's decision was "sensible". | |
He added: "The safest law is the one we already have - a complete ban on assisted suicide and euthanasia." | |
Mr Conway, who is supported by the campaign group Dignity in Dying, was too unwell to travel to London for the hearing. |