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Doctor 'helps Italian man to die' Doctor 'helps Italian man to die'
(20 minutes later)
An Italian doctor has said he has switched off the life support system of a terminally ill man, who lost a legal battle for the right to die.An Italian doctor has said he has switched off the life support system of a terminally ill man, who lost a legal battle for the right to die.
Dr Mario Riccio, who disconnected the respirator, said he had fulfilled the patient's legal right to refuse treatment. He denied it was euthanasia.Dr Mario Riccio, who disconnected the respirator, said he had fulfilled the patient's legal right to refuse treatment. He denied it was euthanasia.
Piergiorgio Welby, 60, was paralysed by muscular dystrophy.Piergiorgio Welby, 60, was paralysed by muscular dystrophy.
His plea for euthanasia - illegal in mainly Roman Catholic Italy - sparked a landmark court case and fierce debate.His plea for euthanasia - illegal in mainly Roman Catholic Italy - sparked a landmark court case and fierce debate.
Doctor's argumentDoctor's argument
"In Italian hospitals therapies are suspended all the time, and this does not lead to any intervention from magistrates or to problems of conscience," Dr Riccio told reporters. "In Italian hospitals therapies are suspended all the time, and this does not lead to any intervention from magistrates or to problems of conscience," Dr Riccio told reporters, following Mr Welby's death late on Wednesday.
"This must not be mistaken for euthanasia. It is a suspension of therapies," he told a news conference in Rome. "Refusing treatment is a right.""This must not be mistaken for euthanasia. It is a suspension of therapies," he told a news conference in Rome. "Refusing treatment is a right."
Mr Welby had been attached to a respirator and feeding tube to keep him alive. Mr Welby had been attached to a respirator for the last six months and a feeding tube to keep him alive.
He had communicated through a computer that read his eye movements.He had communicated through a computer that read his eye movements.
He had asked his family, his doctors and the courts to be allowed to die as he had suffered for many years from muscular dystrophy and his condition had worsened.
A judge ruled on Saturday that while Mr Welby had the constitutional right to have his life support machine switched off, doctors would be legally obliged to resuscitate him.A judge ruled on Saturday that while Mr Welby had the constitutional right to have his life support machine switched off, doctors would be legally obliged to resuscitate him.
Mr Welby had suffered for many years from muscular dystrophy and his condition had worsened in recent months.
Euthanasia and doctor-assisted suicide have been legalised in the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, but remain illegal in much of the rest of the world.Euthanasia and doctor-assisted suicide have been legalised in the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, but remain illegal in much of the rest of the world.
In September, Mr Welby had written to the Italian President Giorgio Napolitano pleading to be allowed to die.
Italy's Health Minister, Livia Turco, has called for new legislation to clarify the legal position on exactly which aggressive measures are licit in order to sustain life in cases like that of Mr Welby, the BBC's David Willey reports from Rome.
The Vatican teaches that life must be safeguarded from its beginning to its natural end.