Two hundred empty wheelchairs arranged meticulously in a Roman piazza last week with a direct and unsettling message: “Non mi uccidere” (“Don’t kill me”) symbolised a powerful campaign against legalising assisted-suicide/euthanasia in Italy.
In 2022, Italy’s lower house passed a bill facilitating a right to request ‘medical assistance in dying’ where the patient has an irreversible illness, is enduring ‘intolerable’ suffering, and is being kept alive by medical treatments, as is extremely common with seriously ill people.
However, the legislation has ben stalled in the Senate for the past three years..
According to the organisers of the protest, the 200 empty wheelchairs represent the sick, disabled, elderly, and vulnerable people who “are asking Parliament for more care, more rights, more dignity but are instead faced with cynical shortcuts to death.”
“Only 33pc of those entitled to palliative care” have access to it, “with some Italian regions where coverage drops to as low as 4pc-5pc.” This figure leaves thousands of families without health care assistance.
Italy has begun a “drift toward assisted suicide that could lead to a veritable state-sanctioned massacre of the sick, the elderly living alone, the depressed, and people with disabilities,” said ProVita & Famiglia.
















