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Catholic News 2

Brussels, Belgium, May 10, 2016 / 03:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The Parliament of Canada has until June 6 to consider Bill C-14, controversial legislation that, if passed, would legalize euthanasia in the country.But some citizens of Belgium, where euthanasia has been legal since 2002, have a message for Canada: Don’t do it.In a new series of videos, Belgian doctors, lawyers, and family members of the euthanized argue that legalizing euthanasia sets a dangerous precedent that threatens the most vulnerable in society and compromises patient-physician relationships.The videos are produced by the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition and Dunn Media. The group is also producing a documentary on the issue entitled “Vulnerable: The Euthanasia Deception” due out in June.“Don’t go there,” Hendrik Reitsema, whose grandfather was euthanized in Belgium, said in one of the videos. “Why? You open Pandora’s Box to the practice of killing as though it were a ...

Brussels, Belgium, May 10, 2016 / 03:02 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The Parliament of Canada has until June 6 to consider Bill C-14, controversial legislation that, if passed, would legalize euthanasia in the country.

But some citizens of Belgium, where euthanasia has been legal since 2002, have a message for Canada: Don’t do it.

In a new series of videos, Belgian doctors, lawyers, and family members of the euthanized argue that legalizing euthanasia sets a dangerous precedent that threatens the most vulnerable in society and compromises patient-physician relationships.

The videos are produced by the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition and Dunn Media. The group is also producing a documentary on the issue entitled “Vulnerable: The Euthanasia Deception” due out in June.

“Don’t go there,” Hendrik Reitsema, whose grandfather was euthanized in Belgium, said in one of the videos. “Why? You open Pandora’s Box to the practice of killing as though it were a normal part of medicine.”  

“We’ve had a protection against physicians killing people for more than 2,000 years because of the Hippocratic tradition,” Reitsema said. “And we’ve now arrived at a moment in history where… physicians now become a threat to their patients.”

Euthanasia, which Canada’s Parliament is considering, differs from physician-assisted suicide in that anyone – a doctor, a family member, the patient – may administer lethal drugs to the patient. Under physician-assisted suicide, the patient’s doctor prescribes lethal drugs, but legally only the patient can administer them to themselves.

Proponents of euthanasia laws often argue that safeguards can protect the vulnerable from abuse of these laws. However, Belgian doctors and lawyers in one of the short videos contend that “safeguards are an illusion.”

“For me the only clear safeguard is to say that a doctor cannot kill a patient,” Dr. Benoit Beuselinck, a Belgian oncologist and professor, said in the video.

“Once you admit that a doctor can kill his patient, even in terminal conditions, it would be very difficult to put a red line and say you cannot go beyond this.”

Dr. Beuselinck said that often, oncologists are reluctant to give their patients a prognosis because everyone’s body reacts differently to diseases and treatments, and prognoses are often wrong. Under Belgian law, any adult with a terminal illness can request euthanasia. But a terminal diagnosis can be deceiving, as many patients survive far past their prognosis.

“Because what is a terminally ill situation? How can you judge if a patient will live three days, three weeks, three months?”

In another video, Dr. Beuselinck said he has also seen the law go unchecked, with an estimated 30-40 percent of performed cases of euthanasia going unreported.

“There is no control of the law,” he said. “In Belgium patients are killed by euthanasia at the first diagnosis of Alzheimer's or of malignant disease of a cancer.”

Anti-euthanasia activist Lionel Roosemont said in the “Safeguards” video that once euthanasia becomes enshrined in law, it soon ceases to be a free choice.

“The freedom of choice of euthanasia has become the obligation of choice, of having euthanasia,” he said.

Once euthanasia is an option, sick people often feel they have an obligation to request euthanasia so as not to be a burden on their friends and family, Reitsema said.

“This shows you that by opening the possibility of euthanasia, you open a sense of burden,” he said.

“Before it’s a legal option, caring for somebody who needs care is just the human thing to do, but once they have the opportunity to choose to let their lives be ended, their not doing so is to choose to burden their next of kin. That’s unfair.”  

Etienne Montero, a Belgian lawyer and Dean of Faculty of Law at the University of Namur, said euthanasia laws are also dangerous because of the unclear terms.

“The law says the patient must be suffering from a grave or incurable illness that results in physical or mental suffering, but it is evident that it would be questioned very quickly why someone who is suffering from a psychiatric illness should not also be able to access euthanasia. This is what we see today, we see that euthanasia applies in situations of psychiatric suffering that are not necessarily grave or incurable illnesses,” he said.

In 2015, a 24-year old woman identified as Laura was granted the “right to die” under Belgium’s law for suffering suicidal thoughts. But as the appointment for lethal injection neared, she changed her mind.

Belgium has also seen the law stretched beyond its original limits. While the original law only allowed those 18 years of age or older to request euthanasia, children of any age can now request euthanasia and be given it, if it is approved by doctors, psychologists, and their parents.

Marnix Coelmont, a teacher and advocate, said his advice to Canada would be that if they are going to approve euthanasia, then they also need to invest a lot of money in palliative, end-of-life care that so that people don’t feel like they have to choose euthanasia.

“Because unbearable pain is a very relative concept,” he said.

Dr. Beuselinck said doctors can help their patients at the time of death without killing them.  

“We help people to die by controlling their suffering and controlling their symptoms. We don’t help them to die by killing them directly.”

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CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -- As Donald Trump, Hillary and Bill Clinton and Bernie Sanders campaigned in West Virginia this month before thousands of voters, ex-convict Keith Judd slipped into the state unnoticed....

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -- As Donald Trump, Hillary and Bill Clinton and Bernie Sanders campaigned in West Virginia this month before thousands of voters, ex-convict Keith Judd slipped into the state unnoticed....

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SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) -- As Congress debates how to help Puerto Rico with its $70 billion debt, Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew is trying to prod lawmakers into action with stories of crumbling infrastructure on the island and a lack of basic services....

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) -- As Congress debates how to help Puerto Rico with its $70 billion debt, Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew is trying to prod lawmakers into action with stories of crumbling infrastructure on the island and a lack of basic services....

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- In suing the state where she was born and raised for discriminating against transgender people, Attorney General Loretta Lynch invoked the defining civil rights struggles of the last century and made clear that the federal government sees its dispute with North Carolina as about far more than bathrooms and showers....

WASHINGTON (AP) -- In suing the state where she was born and raised for discriminating against transgender people, Attorney General Loretta Lynch invoked the defining civil rights struggles of the last century and made clear that the federal government sees its dispute with North Carolina as about far more than bathrooms and showers....

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GRAFING, Germany (AP) -- A German man was arrested after several people were stabbed at a train station near Munich early Tuesday, authorities said. One victim died in a hospital and three other people were wounded....

GRAFING, Germany (AP) -- A German man was arrested after several people were stabbed at a train station near Munich early Tuesday, authorities said. One victim died in a hospital and three other people were wounded....

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(Vatican Radio) Voters in the Philippines have been electing a new leader. The poll front-runner is Rodrigo Duterte whose tough talk on crime and drugs chimed with many voters' concerns. Although final results have not been officially declared, his opponents have conceded defeat.Duterte is a charismatic former city mayor whose presidential campaign was marked by blunt language.Listen to Alastair Wanklyn’s report: Rodrigo Duterte promised to target kidnappers and thieves. In the case of drug addicts, he said “either you will kill me or I’ll kill you, idiots.”Dutertes is seen as tapping frustrations with corruption and violence in a state that's too poor to help many of those in poverty. He has talked of suspending the Philippine parliament to get things done.Critics point to allegations by human rights activists that Duterte condoned or even encouraged killings by armed vigilante groups while he was mayor of Davao city.Crime levels went down during t...

(Vatican Radio) Voters in the Philippines have been electing a new leader. The poll front-runner is Rodrigo Duterte whose tough talk on crime and drugs chimed with many voters' concerns. Although final results have not been officially declared, his opponents have conceded defeat.

Duterte is a charismatic former city mayor whose presidential campaign was marked by blunt language.

Listen to Alastair Wanklyn’s report:

Rodrigo Duterte promised to target kidnappers and thieves. In the case of drug addicts, he said “either you will kill me or I’ll kill you, idiots.”

Dutertes is seen as tapping frustrations with corruption and violence in a state that's too poor to help many of those in poverty. He has talked of suspending the Philippine parliament to get things done.

Critics point to allegations by human rights activists that Duterte condoned or even encouraged killings by armed vigilante groups while he was mayor of Davao city.

Crime levels went down during the 22 years he was in charge. And that record is what he campaigned on in the presidential election.

There was a swell of support for a candidate who comes from outside the establishment. Some voters said they believe it's time for a maverick.

Internationally, Duterte said he wants to repair relations with China. He has proposed a regional summit to discuss disputed islands, and suggested that all sides take a step back and agree to leave the disagreement on ice.

Meanwhile, the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines said on Tuesday that the Church will work with the new government. In a statement, the Archbishop of Lingayen-Dagupan urged newly elected officials to see their success not as a popularity contest but as God calling them to service for the weakest and most distressed.

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(Vatican Radio) Brazilian politics descended further into chaos yesterday, as the speaker of the lower house of Brazil’s parliament annulled an earlier vote to begin impeachment proceedings against President Dilma Rousseff.Christopher Wells has more: Monday's move by acting Speaker Waldir Maranhao looks set to delay and complicate the impeachment process that was widely expected to see the embattled President suspended later this week.A Senate vote on whether to accept the matter and put Rousseff on trial had been scheduled for Wednesday, with the expectation that the vote would lead to Rousseff's immediate suspension and Vice President Michel Temer taking over. Senate President Renan Calheiros told colleagues that he intended to ignore Maranhao's action and move forward with the proceedings as scheduled. He criticized the speaker's action as “toying with democracy.”Whether the Senate would be able to go forward was unclear, however, since both th...

(Vatican Radio) Brazilian politics descended further into chaos yesterday, as the speaker of the lower house of Brazil’s parliament annulled an earlier vote to begin impeachment proceedings against President Dilma Rousseff.

Christopher Wells has more:

Monday's move by acting Speaker Waldir Maranhao looks set to delay and complicate the impeachment process that was widely expected to see the embattled President suspended later this week.

A Senate vote on whether to accept the matter and put Rousseff on trial had been scheduled for Wednesday, with the expectation that the vote would lead to Rousseff's immediate suspension and Vice President Michel Temer taking over. Senate President Renan Calheiros told colleagues that he intended to ignore Maranhao's action and move forward with the proceedings as scheduled. He criticized the speaker's action as “toying with democracy.”

Whether the Senate would be able to go forward was unclear, however, since both the government and opposition were likely to appeal Maranhao's decision. At the very least, the impeachment process could be pushed back a few days.

President Dilma Rousseff is battling impeachment over allegations that her government violated fiscal rules, in what critics say was a bid to artificially bolster the country's flagging economy. Rousseff has said that prior presidents used such fiscal maneuvers and that the impeachment effort amounts to a “coup” aimed at removing her and her left-leaning Workers' Party, which has governed the country for 13 years.

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The Catholic diocese of Wa in Ghana has a new Bishop as of 7 May following the episcopal ordination of Bishop Richard Kuuia Baawobr, a member of the religious congregation of the Missionaries of Africa, also known as the White Fathers.Bishop Richard’s ordination was witnessed by many, with Church leaders consisting of Archbishops and Bishops from Italy, Ghana, Nigeria, Burkina Faso and Nigeria. These Church leaders first gathered at St. Andrew’s Cathedral in Wa, before proceeding in a convoy to the Sports Stadium.In a prepared question interview soon after Pope Francis appointed him Bishop of Wa in February, Bishop Richard spoke about his reaction when he was approached for the appointment.“It took me a while to pray about it and to gather sufficient inner calm and strength to say yes,” Bishop Richard said, describing the responsibility as a “challenge.”Below are the answers by Bishop Richard (BB) to the prepared question interview by Damian Ave...

The Catholic diocese of Wa in Ghana has a new Bishop as of 7 May following the episcopal ordination of Bishop Richard Kuuia Baawobr, a member of the religious congregation of the Missionaries of Africa, also known as the White Fathers.

Bishop Richard’s ordination was witnessed by many, with Church leaders consisting of Archbishops and Bishops from Italy, Ghana, Nigeria, Burkina Faso and Nigeria. These Church leaders first gathered at St. Andrew’s Cathedral in Wa, before proceeding in a convoy to the Sports Stadium.

In a prepared question interview soon after Pope Francis appointed him Bishop of Wa in February, Bishop Richard spoke about his reaction when he was approached for the appointment.

“It took me a while to pray about it and to gather sufficient inner calm and strength to say yes,” Bishop Richard said, describing the responsibility as a “challenge.”

Below are the answers by Bishop Richard (BB) to the prepared question interview by Damian Avevor (DA), the News Editor of The Catholic Standard News Paper in Ghana.

DA: Congratulations on your appointment as the new Bishop of Wa. As the Superior General of the Missionaries of Africa, how did you feel when you were informed about your new appointment?

BB: I was really taken by surprise and I thought I was not hearing properly the Prefect of the Evangelisation of Peoples, Cardinal Fernando Filoni, when he told me that the Holy Father had appointed me as Bishop of Wa. I had other plans for my missionary life after these years of service to our Missionary Family.

It took me a while to pray about it and to gather sufficient inner calm and strength to say yes. I am not appointed because I am more worthy than others; it is not about my qualities; it is about God’s mercy. Since he has chosen me in spite of who I am, I feel challenged to share God’s mercy with others in this new call.

DA: Some say uneasy is the head that wears the crown, but would you say your appointment is a big challenge?

BB: Yes, it is a big challenge. As the Dagare proverb has it: “something has to die for the sauce to be nice”. I have to die to myself in order to rise with Christ through this service to my sisters and brothers back home. Jesus himself said that “no prophet is accepted in his own native place” (Luke 4,24). I am from Ko Parish.

Wa Diocese is my home. Many people know me, my talents, but also my weaknesses. Archbishop Emeritus Gregory E. Kpiebaya had accepted that I go out as a Missionary from this diocese.

I am confronted with the fact that since I have been out of the Diocese since 1981, first as a Seminarian and then since 1987 as a Missionary priest, home has changed quite a lot and I do not know everything. I am aware of some of the pastoral realities, but I will have to learn a lot from my younger and senior brothers and sisters.

The days following the announcement of the appointment, I have been overwhelmed by the good will messages that have come in through phone calls, emails and the social media. I feel that many are really praying for me and encouraging me and saying, “you are not alone; welcome home; we are happy to work with you”. I thank them. I am looking forth to this new experience.

DA: How do you see your new office?

BB: On the day of my priestly ordination (on 18th July 1987), the Christians of Wiagha parish (Navrongo-Bolgatanga Diocese) offered me a gift of a nicely decorated calabash on which my name, the date of the ordination and a motto were written. The motto inscribed on it was “Called to serve”. I see my episcopal ministry as continuing this call to serve in a different way.

I have chosen as Motto “Servus Misericordiae Dei” (“Servant of the Mercy of God”). This calabash is on my coat of arms today. The calabash is open, empty, ready to welcome anything, to receive what is offered and to give also what it has received. In the calabash the welcome water is offered to quench the thirsty traveller before any greetings and business can begin.

I will be asking myself and my fellow Christians and other people of good will: “What are we thirsting for? What are we ready to share with others? How can we be servants of God’s Mercy to each other in view of building up God’s Kingdom where he has placed us?”

DA: As the Bishop, what are some of the priority areas would you envisage to tackle?

BB: There is a saying that “you sit on the old mat to weave the new one”. I am succeeding great leaders like the Servant of God, Cardinal Peter Porekuu Dery, Archbishop Emeritus Gregory E. Kpiebaya and now Bishop Emeritus Paul Bemile. They have all contributed significantly to the growth of God’s People in this Diocese. I treasure this past and want to build on it. Although I can only walk in my own shoes, I would like to take their vision and carry things forward. It will not be a repetition, but hopefully a deepening of some of their insights.

It will be the case, for example, of bringing the Word of God to the Small Christian Communities in our towns and villages. I therefore, will like to begin by opening my eyes, heart and mind and, together with my predecessors, the clergy, religious and aity, see how can we move forward. It is together as People of God that we will listen to what the Spirit of Jesus is saying to us in our context and with the help of the Word of God, discern how to live as brothers and sisters of Jesus Christ.

Having participated in the Synod on the vocation and mission of the family in the world and in the Church in October 2015, I am keen to share something of that with the diocesan family. The post-synodal Apostolic Exhortation Amoris Laetitia (“The Joy of Love”) has come at the right time. How can we as pastoral agents “accompany” the families of our Diocese in their joys and pains to be missionary disciples of Jesus.

In all this an important thing / attitude will be that of humble collaboration and networking within the country and with fellow Christians and people of good will elsewhere. The North-South collaboration has contributed a lot to the establishment of the faith. My own missionary experience shows me that the South-South collaboration is just as important and necessary to complement what is already happening.

I cannot say more about other priority areas as at now since I do not know the entire reality of the Diocese as yet.

DA: What are your expectations from your colleague Priests, Religious and the lay faithful?

BB: I expect that all of us will be joyful and authentic witnesses of our faith and our calling wherever we are. It is through this that we will be able to share the mercy of God that we have received so often ourselves.

DA: What would you want to say to them?

BB: St Augusitine said “For you I am Bishop but with you I am a fellow Christian”. That is what I am. The Diocese is not for me! It is for all of us. Let us put our heart into it and reconnect, if necessary, with the enthusiasm of the first call. Let us recall when we first heard Jesus’ call and how that mobilized our whole beings to the point that he was the only person who mattered and we committed ourselves to following him. Like Mary, let us say “Here I am, I have come to serve!” She will intercede for us.

(By Damian Avevor, The Catholic Standard, Ghana )

 

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ST. LOUIS (AP) -- Lezley McSpadden was taking a cigarette break from her grocery store job when a friend called to say someone had been shot in the street near Canfield Green Apartments in Ferguson....

ST. LOUIS (AP) -- Lezley McSpadden was taking a cigarette break from her grocery store job when a friend called to say someone had been shot in the street near Canfield Green Apartments in Ferguson....

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BAGHDAD (AP) -- After more than a decade of dipping in and out of Iraqi politics, Muqtada al-Sadr, the young Shiite cleric who first made his name fighting U.S. forces in post-2003 Iraq, is leveraging his enduring popular appeal to again roil Iraq's political order....

BAGHDAD (AP) -- After more than a decade of dipping in and out of Iraqi politics, Muqtada al-Sadr, the young Shiite cleric who first made his name fighting U.S. forces in post-2003 Iraq, is leveraging his enduring popular appeal to again roil Iraq's political order....

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