Right to Life or Death
Article 21 of the Indian Constitution which deals with protection of life and
personal liberty has gone through successive interpretations by the Courts of
law in important landmark judgements. Each of these interpretations has widened
the ambit of Article 21 to include such facets of life which provides meaning,
purpose and dignity to existence. Article 21 specifically says that no person
shall be deprived of their life or personal liberty except according to
procedure established by law. The word liberty is the sense and realization of
choice of the attributes associated with the said choice and the term life is
the aspiration to possess the same in a dignified manner.
The two are intrinsically interlinked. Liberty allows an individual the space to
think and act without restriction and life without liberty would be a
meaningless survival. Thus, Article 21 in its own unique way has combined the
concept of life and liberty and has also linked it through a legal procedure for
its deprivation. It was because of this interpretation, right to die was never
interpreted in successive judgements to be an integral part of right to life and
personal liberty under Article 21.
However, Supreme Court in a landmark judgement the case of Common Cause v. Union
of India and Another in March 2018, has laid down broad legal framework to
protect the dignity of a terminally ill patient or those in Persistent
Vegetative State (PVS) with no hope of cure or recovery and in the process has
allowed 1. Passive Euthanasia 2. Right to give Advance Medical Directives or a
valid ‘Living Wills’ to smoothen the dying process as a part of fundamental
right to live with dignity.
The case of passive euthanasia was earlier recognised by a Two Judge Bench in
the case of Aruna Shanbaug in 2011. Now the Constitution Bench in Common
Cause case has expanded the scope of euthanasia by adding to it the principle of
a ‘living will’, or an advance directive, a practice where a person while in a
competent state of mind, leaves written instructions on the sort of medical
treatment that may or may not be administered in the event of them reaching a
stage of terminal illness.
Euthanasia and its kinds Oxford dictionary meaning of euthanasia is painless
killing of a patient suffering from an incurable and painful disease or in an
irreversible coma. Euthanasia is also referred as mercy killing or Physician
Assisted Suicide (PAS) and it can be described as bringing about of the gentle
death of a patient suffering from painful, chronic and incurable disease. There
is a distinction between euthanasia and physician assisted suicide. The
difference lies in the fact as to who administers the lethal medication.
It has been observed that in euthanasia, a physician or third party administers
it while in physician assisted suicide, it is the patient who does it though on
the advice of the doctor. Euthanasia is basically an intentional premature
termination of another person‘s life either by direct intervention (active
euthanasia) or by withholding lifeprolonging measures and resources (passive
euthanasia). This can be done by express or implied request of the person
concerned (voluntary euthanasia) or in the absence of such approval or consent
of the person concerned (non-voluntary euthanasia).
Active euthanasia also referred as positive or aggressive euthanasia, occurs
when death is brought about through a positive act or affirmative action or an
act of commission entailing the use of lethal substances or forces to cause the
intentional death of a person by direct intervention (lethal injection given to
a person with terminal cancer who is in terrible agony). Passive euthanasia, on
the other hand, also called negative or non-aggressive euthanasia, entails
withdrawing of life support measures or withholding of medical treatment for
continuance of life.
Eg. Withholding of antibiotics in case of a patient where death is likely to
occur as a result of not giving the said antibiotics or removal of the heart
lung machine from a patient in coma. Passive Euthanasia is further categorized
into voluntary passive euthanasia and nonvoluntary passive euthanasia. Voluntary
passive euthanasia is a situation where a person who is capable of deciding for
himself decides that he would prefer to die because of various reasons whereas
non voluntary passive euthanasia has been described to mean where a person is
not in a position to decide for himself (when they are in coma or in Persistent
Vegetative State) Supreme Courts across the world including Canada, United
States of America, United Kingdom, Netherlands, Switzerland, Belgium, Spain,
Austria, Italy, Germany and France has viewed distinction between active and
passive euthanasia through the prism of intention where such an act leads to
hastening of death.
Thus, the jurisprudence evolved on passive euthanasia throughout the world has
common thread and has gained moral and legal sanctity for its acceptance in some
form or the other. However, same cannot be said about active euthanasia and
there remains uncertainty about granting legal sanction for its approval. Let us
understand the concept of right to life, right to die, suicide and euthanasia
through successive judgements of Supreme Court of India.
P. Rathinam v. Union of India & Another (1994) In India attempts have been
made to include right to die within the concept of right to life and personal
liberty which is one of the most interpreted Fundamental Right in the
Constitution. In P. Rathinam v. Union of India & Another, many constitutional
issues were raised including questions pertaining to constitutional validity of
attempt to suicide (section 309 of Indian Penal Code) and right to die. While
referring the question whether right to die can be included as an integral part
of Article 21, the Court relied on the case of Maruti Shripati Dubal v. State of
Maharashtra, where Bombay High Court held that fundamental rights have their
positive as well as negative aspects.
Citing an example, it had stated, “freedom of speech and expression includes
freedom not to speak and similarly, the freedom of association and movement
includes freedom not to join any association or move anywhere and accordingly,
it stated that logically it must follow that the right to live would include the
right not to live, i.e., right to die or to terminate one‘s life.â€
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Thus, the Supreme Court in
P. Rathinam v. Union of India & Another ruled that right to life embodied in
Article 21 also embodied in it a right not to live a forced life, to his
detriment, disadvantage or disliking. Supreme Court further declared Section 309
IPC (criminalises attempt to suicide) ultra vires as it violated Article 21. The
Court emphasised that attempt to suicide required medical help and not
punishment and held that it deserved to be removed from the statute book to
humanize the penal laws in India.
Gian Kaur vs. State of Punjab (1996) The ruling of
P. Rathinam v. Union of India & Another was challenged in the case of
Gian Kaur vs. State of Punjab. The question arose that if attempt to commit
suicide was declared void and unconstitutional, then how can abetment to commit
suicide (section 306 IPC) could be considered as a punishable offence. A five
Judge Constitutional Bench held that the "right to life" is inherently
inconsistent with the "right to die" as is "death" with "life". In furtherance,
the right to life, which includes right to live with human dignity, would mean
the existence of such a right up to the natural end of life.
The Court further said that right to life is a natural right embodied under
Article 21 but suicide is an unnatural termination or extinguishing of life and
is therefore incompatible and inconsistent with the concept of right to life.
The Court therefore held Section 306 (abetment of suicide) and 309 (attempt to
suicide) of IPC to be valid and constitutional. Thus, Gian Kaur vs. State of
Punjab effectively overruled the previous judgment of P. Ratinam v. Union of
India and declared that right to die does not form part of Article 21.
In Gian Kaur, Supreme Court further distinguished between euthanasia and
attempt to suicide. The Court observed that right to life including the right to
live with human dignity would mean the existence of such a right up to the end
of natural life. Whereas euthanasia is termination of life of a person who is
terminally ill or in PVS. Thus, euthanasia is not a case of “extinguishing lifeâ€
but only of accelerating the process of natural death which has already
commenced. However, the Court held that permitting termination of life in such
cases to reduce the period of suffering during the process of certain natural
death cannot be included under Article 21 as it amounts to curtailing natural
span of life. Thus, the Court held that the "right to live with human dignity"
cannot be construed to include within its ambit the right to terminate natural
life, at least before the commencement of the process of certain natural death.
Thus, the Court did not allow passive euthanasia as it terminated natural life.
Aruna Shanbaug (2011)
The controversy related to attempt to suicide and abetment of suicide was
decided but the issue of euthanasia still remained. Aruna Shanbaug suffered
brain stem and cervical cord injury and remained in Persistent Vegetative State
for the rest of her life since 1973 till her death in 2015. In 2009, a writ
petition was filed under Article 32 before the Supreme Court of India, seeking
passive euthanasia for Shanbaug. The Court appointed a team of three very
distinguished doctors to examine the petitioner thoroughly and to submit a
report about her physical and mental condition. The team submitted a joint
report. In a landmark judgment in 2011, the Court held, “there is no right to
die under Article 21 of the Constitution and the right to life includes the
right to live with human dignity but in the case of a dying person who is
terminally ill or in permanent vegetative state, he may be allowed a premature
extinction of his life and it would not amount to a crime. â€Supreme Court
allowed doctors at the KEM Hospital in Mumbai to stop force-feeding Shanbaug and
withdraw life support to deliberately end her life, on the discretion of the
doctors. Thus, Supreme Court allowed withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment
from patients not in a position to make informed decision.
 This was the first time after Gian Kaur case, when Supreme Court had allowed
passive euthanasia under strict guidelines and conditions. However, Supreme
Court did not allow active euthanasia and held that ending life through use of
lethal substance' is not permitted in any circumstance. Common Cause v. Union of
India and Another (2018) Supreme Court in common cause case has held that
fundamental right to life and dignity under Article 21 includes right to die
with dignity. Dignity is lost if a person is allowed or forced to undergo pain
and suffering because of unwarranted medical support.
To deprive a person of dignity at the end of life is to deprive him of a
meaningful existence. Meaningful existence includes a person’s right to
self-determination and autonomy to decide their medical treatment. The respect
for an individual human being and in particular for his right to choose how he
should live his own life is individual autonomy or the right of self-
determination. It is the right against non-interference by others, which gives a
competent person who has come of age the right to make decisions concerning his
or her own life and body without any control or interference of others.
In the context of health and medical care decisions, a person's exercise of
self-determination and autonomy involves the exercise of his right to decide
whether and to what extent they are willing to submit themself to medical
procedures and treatments, choosing amongst the available alternative treatments
or, for that matter, opting for no treatment at all which, as per their own
understanding, is in consonance with their own individual aspirations and
values. The Court also agreed that right to a dignified life includes a
“dignified procedure of death.â€
SC distinguished passive euthanasia from suicide and active euthanasia and drew
a judicial line between the two as it called passive euthanasia as a “mere
acceleration of the inevitable conclusion†whereas it declared active euthanasia
as unlawful and illegal. Suicide involves “overt acts†which culminates in an
unnatural death. Supreme Court has invoked its inherent power under Article 142
to grant legal status to its advance directives until Parliament enacts
legislation on the matter. This is a landmark judgment as it departs from
previous judgements on the concept of including right to die with dignity within
the larger ambit of Right to live under Article 21.
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