ur_inner_child
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Martin Bryant's death option
Linda Smith
June 12, 2007 12:00am
Let Bryant take own life: Dr Nitschke
Thoughts?
Linda Smith
June 12, 2007 12:00am
LONG-serving prisoners such as mass murderer Martin Bryant should be legally allowed to die instead of serving their full jail sentences, says euthanasia campaigner Philip Nitschke.
Speaking at the end of a three-day visit to Tasmania, Dr Nitschke said incarcerating prisoners for life was equivalent to "eternal torture" and should not be tolerated by society.
He said prisoners should be given the option of taking a drug to peacefully end their lives, especially Martin Bryant, who has made six suicide attempts in Tasmania's Risdon Prison and has been treated at hospital twice this year after slashing himself with razor blades.
In previous attempts to harm himself Bryant swallowed a toothpaste tube, took an overdose of Rohypnol, and tried to choke on bandages.
"Locking prisoners like Martin Bryant away is all to do with punishment, and if you punish them forever you are effectively torturing them forever," said Dr Nitschke.
"People say you should not let that bastard off the hook so lightly. They want to see revenge forever and they want to see that revenge played out in front of them.
"But let's be honest about the fact that when we put people in prison forever, it's tantamount to torture. What we're doing to people like Martin Bryant is punishing them forever.
"And I don't know if I feel terribly comfortable with the notion of endless revenge."
Dr Nitschke said there was no denying that Bryant -- whose prison papers were marked "never to be released" after he received 35 life sentences for killing 35 people at Port Arthur 11 years ago -- had done terrible things.
But he still deserved the right to end his suffering.
"He's done evil and horrible things and deserves a huge incarceration," Dr Nitschke said. "But either there should be a plan for his rehabilitation and release or infinite incarceration plus or minus the chance to leave with death."
He said there would need to be safeguards, including assessments of a prisoner's physical and mental wellbeing before assisted suicide could occur.
And it was not intended as a quick fix for prisoners who were having adjustment problems in their early days in prison...
Let Bryant take own life: Dr Nitschke
Issues to consider:Australia's worst mass murderer should be allowed to die following several attempts to kill himself in his prison cell, euthanasia advocate Dr Philip Nitschke says.
...Tasmania's Director of Prisons Graeme Barber earlier this year confirmed that on one occasion Bryant secreted a blade in his body and later recovered it to slash his neck.
...Mr Nitschke has been in Hobart to address a University of Tasmania bio-ethics forum... said today the state had no interest in rehabilitating Bryant.
"The sole goal of his (Bryant's) imprisonment is punishment and punishment without hope of release is tantamount to torture," Dr Nitschke said.
"As a society we should admit we are sanctioning torture here and in those circumstances we should allow him to die or provide him with the means to obtain a peaceful death."
He said that giving Bryant an opportunity to end his life would quickly determine if he wants to kill himself.
"Some people claim his attempts at suicide are merely attention seeking gestures, which is possible, but providing him with the means of reliably ending his life would soon make this clear.
"As a society we go to great lengths to prevent him from being able to harm himself but in my opinion putting him in a safe stainless steel box with no hope of escape is nothing more than torture.
"As a society we should admit this is what we are doing."
Prison Action Reform spokesman Greg Barns agreed with Dr Nitschke.
"If right to die legislation was introduced prisoners like any other citizen ought to be able to utilise such legislation.
"I agree with Dr Nitschke that in the case of Martin Bryant his life behind bars amounts to torture because there is no interest in rehabilitating him."
A controversial how-to manual on killing yourself written by Dr Nitschke was banned in Australia in December 2006 and in New Zealand this week.
The Peaceful Pill Handbook was given an "objectionable" rating by the Office of Film and Literature Classification.
Censor Bill Hastings said the "well-intentioned" book was banned not for instructing people how to kill themselves, which was legal, but because it provide information on how to get away with other crimes.
- Adequete punishment for criminals of horrendous crimes
- Justice for the victims and their families
- Idea of "endless revenge" and torture
- Principles of gaol and rehabilitation
- Euthanasia
Thoughts?