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Death on TV Reveals a Swiss Haven for Suicides
Associated Press/AP Online
December 15, 2008
The canton of Zurich examined the practice and found in May that the group had done nothing illegal. But the use of helium smacked to many Swiss of Nazi gas chambers, and made Minelli a tabloid hate figure — a sentiment widely shared in Schwerzenbach.
Like most Swiss, the townspeople support the principle of assisted suicide, but “the helium was the last straw,” says Manfred Milz, who is evicting Dignitas from his building.
It has to leave by June — its third move in two years. Dignitas previously used a private home, hotel rooms, even mobile homes.
But demand continues to grow, Dignitas says, and its membership has reached nearly 6,000 over the past decade. Some are merely supporters of its work, others intend to die with its help when the time comes.
The government is weighing rules that could spell the end for “suicide tourism,” which James Harris of London-based Dignity in Dying, would only mean more agonizing suicides, often botched.
Bernard Sutter, a spokesman for Exit, Switzerland’s largest assisted-suicide group, which only helps Swiss residents, says other countries should change their laws.
“We can’t solve all the problems of Germany, England, France and Italy,” he said.
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