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Posted: 2016-08-10 11:42:49

Updated August 10, 2016 22:29:15

Andrew Denton has lashed out at a "subterranean Catholic force" of politicians and businessman who he claims continue to thwart attempts to allow legally assisted voluntary euthanasia in Australia.

Key points:

  • Denton says most Australians support voluntary euthanasia
  • Denton's campaign is inspired by his father's death from heart failure
  • Denton says a euthanasia law should be underpinned by 'three bedrock principles'

The broadcaster and media personality told the National Press Club the will is there in Australia for legally assisted voluntary suicide, but powerful people with vested interests are standing in the way.

He went on to name two key politicians who he said were driving forces 20 years ago and remain in play today: Liberal MP Kevin Andrews and Labor MP Tony Burke.

"The joint operation was led on the Liberal side by a young Kevin Andrews, a leading member of the conservative Lyons Forum, dubbed by some 'The God Squad', who worked in tandem with rising Labor star Tony Burke," Denton said.

He said a number of prominent Catholic businessmen also backed the campaign, and that these forces are still in place and are just as determined to thwart any attempt to change laws.

"It's an issue where denialism is still rampant today — denial of the public will, denial of the evidence."

On Wednesday night Mr Burke responded, saying it was wrong to make assumptions about his political views based on his religion.

"Pretending my faith determines my political views hits a pretty clear wall when you consider my support for marriage equality," he said.

"The claim past debates were driven solely by religion doesn't explain why many atheists and people such as Lindsay Tanner and Barry Jones held the same view as me."

'It's not that we lack the wit'

Denton said polls showed "support for voluntary euthanasia in this country consistently runs at over 70 per cent".

"It's not that we lack the wit — we've done it before — it was Australia which enacted the world's first assisted dying law," he said.

Denton was referring to laws passed in the Northern Territory in the mid-1990s.

"Many of you remember the first man to use it, a 66-year-old Darwin carpenter called Bob Dent, dying from prostate cancer," he said.

"Both his testicles had been removed, he'd lost 25 kilos, wore a catheter and a leg bag, and as he said himself, he couldn't get a hug in case his ribs cracked.

"Under that law Bob, and three others, got the release they so desperately wanted."

What Denton wants in Australia is a carefully written law that is only applicable if a sufferer has an extreme medical condition.

He explained it would have "three bedrock principles".

Firstly, to access voluntary euthanasia a person would need to be a "mentally competent adult — excluding children or those with dementia or Alzheimer's disease", Denton said.

Secondly, the request would be required to be voluntary. And thirdly, the person must suffer from a physical illness, excluding "purely psychiatric suffering".

Denton also told Lateline he believed voluntary euthanasia laws should go hand-in-hand with increased resources and funding for palliative care.

"Palliative care has an incredibly important role in our society," he said.

"However it is simply a myth to suggest that palliative care, no matter how many resources it has, can deal with all suffering and distress at the end of life.

"In their own words, Palliative Care Australia say that even with optimal care they cannot deal with all pain and suffering at the end of life."

Father's death 'like waterboarding'

Denton has put his career on hold in recent years to research and campaign for assisted suicide to be legalised in Australia.

His push has been driven by a deeply personal experience — the death of his father, Kit Denton, 19 years ago.

"Watching my father Kit die remains the most profoundly shocking experience of my life," he said.

He explained that his father was 67, clearly dying of heart failure and obviously in great pain, but was "assisted to die in the only way that Australia's laws then, and now, would allow".

This was using increasing doses of sedatives to ease the pain.

"Of course morphine couldn't relieve his distress — not his and not ours … the images of those final days will never be erased," Denton said.

"When your heart fails, fluid backs up in your lungs and you spend all day, every day, fighting for breath. It's like waterboarding — trying to suck air through a damp mask, drowning and being revived again."

Topics: death, euthanasia, human-interest, australia

First posted August 10, 2016 19:04:34

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