Uruguay legalizes euthanasia

Uruguay legalizes euthanasia
Beatriz Gelos, a 71-year-old Uruguayan who has battled neurodegenerative ALS for two decades, said the law was “compassionate, very humane.” (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 7 sec ago

Uruguay legalizes euthanasia

Uruguay legalizes euthanasia
  • The vote came after 10 hours of debate on an issue several lawmakers called “the most difficult”
  • Uruguay’s ruling party, leftist Frente Amplio, was behind the initiative, which was met with fierce opposition mainly from the religious right

Montevideo: Uruguay on Wednesday legalized euthanasia, becoming one of the first countries in Latin America and among a dozen worldwide to allow assisted suicide.
The small South American country has a long history of passing socially liberal laws, legalizing marijuana, same-sex marriage and abortion long before most others.
On Wednesday, euthanasia was added to the list with the Senate approving the so-called “Dignified Death” bill.
Twenty out of 31 legislators present voted in favor, passing a law approved by the lower Chamber of Representatives in August.
The vote came after 10 hours of debate on an issue several lawmakers called “the most difficult.”
The discussion was largely respectful and often emotional, though some onlookers watching the debate cried out “murderers” after the vote passed.
“I feel relief and joy,” Florencia Salgueiro told AFP after celebrating in the gallery alongside other euthanasia advocates.
Salgueiro had witnessed her father’s struggle to receive assistance to end his life when ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, made his days unbearable. He died without fulfilling his wish.
Elsewhere in Latin America, courts in Colombia and Ecuador have decriminalized euthanasia without passing laws to legalize the practice, while Cuba allows for terminal patients to refuse being kept alive artificially.
Uruguay’s ruling party, leftist Frente Amplio, was behind the initiative, which was met with fierce opposition mainly from the religious right.
A recent poll showed more than 60 percent of Uruguayans support legal euthanasia, with only 24 percent opposed.
The law allows assisted suicide for adult Uruguayan citizens or residents who are mentally competent and in the terminal stage of an incurable disease that causes them suffering.
Beatriz Gelos, a 71-year-old Uruguayan who has battled neurodegenerative ALS for two decades, told AFP the law was “compassionate, very humane.”
In a wheelchair and speaking with a faltering voice, she said opponents “have no idea what it’s like to live like this.”
Another advocate is Monica Canepa, whose son Pablo, 39, has been paralyzed by an incurable disease.
“Pablo is not living. This is not life,” she told AFP.
Uruguay’s Medical Association has not taken a stance on euthanasia, allowing its doctor members to follow their own conscience.
The Catholic Church, for its part, has expressed “sadness” at the decision.


Merz to advocate use of frozen Russian assets at EU summit

Merz to advocate use of frozen Russian assets at EU summit
Updated 46 sec ago

Merz to advocate use of frozen Russian assets at EU summit

Merz to advocate use of frozen Russian assets at EU summit
BERLIN: German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said on Thursday he would call for the European Union to use Russian assets frozen in the West to provide a 140 billion euro ($163 billion) loan to Ukraine to finance its war effort at the upcoming EU summit.
Merz first advocated for an interest-free EU loan backed by the frozen assets in late September.
“We do not want to do this in order to prolong the war, but to end it,” Merz said in a speech to the Bundestag lower house of parliament.
“(Russian President Vladimir) Putin must realize that our support for Ukraine will not wane, but will grow, and that he cannot count on outlasting us.”

Impeached president confirms he fled Madagascar at the weekend

Impeached president confirms he fled Madagascar at the weekend
Updated 10 min 35 sec ago

Impeached president confirms he fled Madagascar at the weekend

Impeached president confirms he fled Madagascar at the weekend
  • President Andry Rajoelina left between October 11 and 12 after “explicit and extremely serious threats were made against the life of the Head of State,”

Antananarivo, Madagascar: Madagascar’s ousted president confirmed for the first time that he had fled the country, issuing a statement after a military-led power grab prompted by weeks of demonstrations that have plunged the island nation into crisis.
President Andry Rajoelina left between October 11 and 12 after “explicit and extremely serious threats were made against the life of the Head of State,” the presidency said in a statement late Wednesday.
The threats had come when he was due to travel abroad for a mission, the statement sent to AFP said.
Media reports indicated the 51-year-old leader was evacuated on Sunday aboard a French military plane.
On Monday, he said he had taken refuge in a “safe place” without giving further details.
Rajoelina, who first came to power after a military-backed coup in 2009, accused the National Assembly of colluding with the military to remove him from office.
The military officers who seized power said their leader, Col. Michael Randrianirina, would be sworn in as new president on Friday.
The youth-led Gen Z movement that initiated the protests on September 25 over lack of water and energy welcomed Randrianirina’s intervention.
The international community voiced alarm, with the United Nations censuring what it called an “unconstitutional” takeover and the African Union announcing Wednesday it was suspending Madagascar “with immediate effect.”
Madagascar is the latest of several former French colonies to have fallen under military control since 2020, after coups in Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Gabon and Guinea.


Former US Marine pilot who trained Chinese flyers appeals extradition from Australia

Former US Marine pilot who trained Chinese flyers appeals extradition from Australia
Updated 15 min 25 sec ago

Former US Marine pilot who trained Chinese flyers appeals extradition from Australia

Former US Marine pilot who trained Chinese flyers appeals extradition from Australia
  • In December 2024, Australia’s then attorney-general Mark Dreyfus approved a United States extradition request for Duggan
  • Duggan faces US charges including that he trained Chinese military pilots to land on aircraft carriers

CANBERRA: Former US Marine Corps pilot Daniel Duggan appealed in an Australian court on Thursday against extradition to the United States on charges of violating US arms control laws in relation to China, with his lawyer arguing that his conduct was not an offense in Australia at the time.
In December 2024, Australia’s then attorney-general Mark Dreyfus approved a United States extradition request for Duggan, who faces US charges including that he trained Chinese military pilots to land on aircraft carriers.
Duggan, 57, a naturalized Australian citizen, was arrested by Australian Federal Police in a rural town in the state of New South Wales in October 2022, shortly after returning from China, where he had lived since 2014.
Duggan appeared in the federal court in Canberra on Thursday, clean-shaven in a dark blue suit.
He sat erect in his seat as he followed the proceedings with a pen and documents on his lap but did not speak until after the arguments had been heard, when he thanked the judge for allowing him to attend and “see justice done.”

DUGGAN’S LAWYER SAYS EXTRADITION IS ‘UNCHARTERED TERRITORY’
His lawyer Christopher Parkin told the court the extradition was “uncharted territory” for Australia, arguing that Duggan’s conduct was not an offense in Australia at the time or when the US requested extradition and so did not meet the requirement for dual criminality in Australia’s extradition treaty with the United States.
“This is a fairly extraordinary case,” Parkin said.
“The offenses must be punishable under the laws of both parties at the time when the relevant conduct occurred,” he said, adding that it should not be possible to “punish someone in this country for something they did 10 years ago that wasn’t an offense at the time.”
The barrister for the Attorney-General Trent Glover said this was a false interpretation of the extradition procedure and nothing prevented Duggan from being sent to the United States.
Duggan’s lawyers previously argued in court that there is no evidence the Chinese pilots he trained in South Africa between 2010 and 2012 were military, and he was no longer a US citizen at the time of the alleged offenses.
Duggan renounced his US citizenship in 2016 at the US embassy in Beijing and the certificate was backdated to 2012, they said.
A 2017 indictment in the United States said Duggan’s alleged violation of an arms embargo imposed on China by the United States also included providing aviation services in China in 2010, and providing an assessment of China’s aircraft carrier training.
Duggan, who has six children in Australia, has been held in prison since his arrest three years ago.
A small group of protesters stood outside the court with placards calling for Duggan’s release.
His wife, Saffrine, said Duggan had been treated unlawfully and the Australian government had allowed him to become a pawn in an ideological war between the United States and China.
“It’s been a real struggle,” she told Reuters. “We just want Dan to come home.”


Dozens injured in Peru anti-crime protest after president impeachment

Dozens injured in Peru anti-crime protest after president impeachment
Updated 16 October 2025

Dozens injured in Peru anti-crime protest after president impeachment

Dozens injured in Peru anti-crime protest after president impeachment
  • Youth-led demonstrations brought thousands of Peruvians to the streets in Lima and several other cities

Lima: Violence at a rally in Peru’s capital on Wednesday left dozens injured, said President Jose Jeri, whose accession days ago has failed to stamp out angry protests against the country’s political class.
Youth-led demonstrations brought thousands of Peruvians to the streets in Lima and several other cities, frustrated by the authorities’ failure to resolve a worsening crime crisis.
“Update: 55 police officers injured” and “20 civilians injured,” Jeri said on social media, updating earlier figures from the clashes near Congress in central Lima.
The South American country has been rocked by protests for weeks, and lawmakers voted on Friday to impeach then-president Dina Boluarte, blamed by critics for the crisis.
Jeri, a right-wing politician who had served as leader of Congress, became interim president until elections in April.
Wednesday’s protests were called by a youth-led collective, artists’ groups and labor unions.
As night fell, some protesters tried to breach the security barrier around Congress, an AFP correspondent said. Some in the crowd also hurled stones and lit fireworks.
Police in riot gear responded with tear gas.
“I think there is general discontent because nothing has been done,” 49-year-old freelancer Amanda Meza told AFP while marching toward Congress.
“There’s no security from the state,” she said.
“Extortion, murders... have grown massively in Peru.”
Boluarte’s impeachment followed protests by bus companies, merchants and students over shakedowns by criminal gangs — and attacks on those who refuse to pay protection money.
Extortion and contract killings have been a feature of daily life across the South American country.
Gangs like Los Pulpos and Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua, which operates across Latin America, hold people from all walks of life for ransom.
Jeri has attempted to take the heat out of the protests by vowing to “declare war” on organized crime.


India’s pollution refugees fleeing Delhi’s toxic air

India’s pollution refugees fleeing Delhi’s toxic air
Updated 16 October 2025

India’s pollution refugees fleeing Delhi’s toxic air

India’s pollution refugees fleeing Delhi’s toxic air
  • New Delhi and the surrounding metropolitan area, home to more than 30 million people, consistently tops world rankings for air pollution
  • Natasha Uppalt, founder of maternal health support group Matrescence India, said leaving the heavily polluted capital city was the “best decision”

BENGALURU, India: Pollution levels in India’s capital shaped Natasha Uppal and her husband’s decision on parenthood — either raise their child away from the city, or stay put and remain childless.
New Delhi and the surrounding metropolitan area, home to more than 30 million people, consistently tops world rankings for air pollution.
Uppal, who grew up in the city, often considered leaving — especially on days spent indoors with air purifiers humming, or when she battled severe migraines.
The turning point came when the couple decided to try for a baby.
“When we thought about what we can curate for our child in Delhi,” she told AFP, “the air just became such a blocker for so many of those things.”
In 2022, they relocated to Bengaluru and, days later, she discovered she was pregnant.
They are among a small but growing number of families leaving Delhi because of health risks linked to air pollution.
Uppal, the 36-year-old founder of maternal health support group Matrescence India, said leaving was the “best decision.”

This photograph taken on September 27, 2025 shows Natasha Uppal, a pollution refugee and founder of maternal health support group Matrescence India, reading news articles about air pollution on a laptop at her residence in Bengaluru. (AFP)

Air pollution in Bengaluru can still sometimes hit three times World Health Organization (WHO) limits.
But that is far below Delhi’s months-long haze — and means her son “is in and out of the house as many times as he likes.”
Clean air is “something that is a basic human right,” she said. “Everyone should be able to take (it) for granted.”

3.8 million deaths 

Each winter, Delhi is blanketed in acrid smog, a toxic mix of crop-burning, factory emissions and choking traffic.
Levels of PM2.5 — cancer-causing microparticles small enough to enter the bloodstream — have surged to as much as 60 times WHO limits.
Despite pledges of reform, measures such as partial vehicle bans or water trucks spraying mist have done little to clear the air.
This year, authorities promise cloud-seeding trials to cut pollution.
A study in The Lancet Planetary Health last year estimated 3.8 million deaths in India between 2009 and 2019 were linked to air pollution.
The UN children’s agency warns that polluted air puts children at heightened risk of acute respiratory infections.
For Vidushi Malhotra, 36, the breaking point came in 2020 as her two-year-old son fell ill repeatedly.
“We had three air purifiers running continuously, and then I needed more,” she said.
A year later, Malhotra, her husband and son moved to Goa. She urged friends to follow, starting what she calls a “mini-movement.” A few did.
“I have to keep going back and see my loved ones go through this,” she added. “That really makes me sad.”

Nebulizers, inhalers 

Others, like Delhi resident Roli Shrivastava, remain but live in constant anxiety.
The 34-year-old keeps inhalers for her smoke allegies and nebulizers ready for her toddler, whose cough worsens each winter.
“The doctor told us winter will be difficult,” she said. “He just told us, ‘When your kid starts coughing at night, don’t even call me — just start nebulising.’“
As winter nears, Shrivastava is preparing for another season indoors — restricting outdoor play for her son, running air purifiers and checking air quality daily.
When the family visits relatives in the southern city of Chennai, her son’s health improves “drastically.”
“His nose stops running, his cough goes away,” she said.
Shrivastava and her husband, who both work with a global advocacy group, say they would have left Delhi long ago if not for the “jobs we love and the opportunities.”
Relocation, she admits, is never far from their minds.
“I don’t think at the rate it’s going, Delhi is a good place to raise kids — when it comes to air pollution at least.”