We hope and pray that Indonesian government assist the terminally ill patients. 
We don't wish Indonesia follow the same mistakes made in America and Europe.
 
SAVE LIFE!!!!
 
Shirley & Angelo
Milano


--- On Tue, 10/27/09, Shirley Hadisandjaja <[email protected]> wrote:


From: Shirley Hadisandjaja <[email protected]>
Subject: INDONESIA: Euthanasia? The government should instead provide medical 
treatment to the poor, the Church says
Date: Tuesday, October 27, 2009, 6:48 PM







INDONESIA
Euthanasia? The government should instead provide medical treatment to the 
poor, the Church says
by Mathias Hariyadi

Lack of money to pay for treatment pushes man to ask that his wife be 
euthanised.

 
Jakarta (AsiaNews) For the first time in the history of the world's largest 
Muslim country, people are debating the issue of euthanasia in Indonesia. All 
because of Panca Satrya Hasan, a Jakarta man, who filed a request with the 
capital's Bogor Islamic Hospital asking that the plug be pulled on his 
seriously ailing wife, 33-year-old Agian Isna Nauli Siregar. 
The woman, who suffered a permanent stroke and is on a life-support machine, 
was reacting to external stimuli, this according to the physicians treating 
her. Her husband claims instead that she has slipped into a coma.
"She won't be able to even recognise me for another 6 to 12 months," Hasan 
said. "I cannot watch her go through this difficult time like this". The two 
have been married for ten years.
For the past month Agian has been in the Special Stroke Unit of the Jakarta 
Central Hospital of Cipto Mangunkusumo. Prior to that, she was in the Bogor 
Hospital for over a month because of hypertension-induced brain damage. 
According to the doctors complications from a caesarean section she suffered 
included a stroke caused by post-natal poisoning.
Her husband Hasan asked that his wife be euthanised because he cannot afford 
the medical costs which are now running at about one million rupiahs (about US$ 
100) per day. "I already owe 60 million rupiahs (US$ 6,000)," Hasan said. "If 
the government can no longer guarantee her right to live, then it is better to 
reduce her suffering," he added.
Agian's case is the first known case involving euthanasia in the vast Asian 
country and has sparked a debate.
According to neurologist Salim Haris, "it would be a different matter if the 
patient were conscious; for example, a patient suffering from acute cancer". In 
his view, it is incumbent on the physician to inform the patient's family that 
the illness is entering its terminal phase or is irreversible, which is the 
case when permanent brain damage occurs. It would be up to the family, the 
neurologist believes, to decide whether medical treatment should continue or 
not.
The neurologist in charge of Agian, Yusuf Misback, claims that Agian had a 
cerebrovascular incident but "never entered into a coma. She suffered a 
stroke". Contrary to the husband's claim that she was in a coma, Dr Misback 
said that she could open her eyes, scream, answer simple questions and follow 
easy orders. "Coma patients are instead generally unresponsive," he added.
For Fr Franz Magnis-Suseso SJ, professor of ethics at the Jesuit-run 
Philosophical Institute of Driyarkara in Jakarta, "it is the state's 
responsibility to take care of any Indonesian citizen who is terminally ill and 
suffers from lack of money". 
Although, he pointed out, the Church has always been against euthanasia the 
issue in this case is not "whether euthanasia is legal or illegal [. . .] but 
whether or not the authorities have fulfilled their duty to take care of the 
needy." According to the Indonesian Constitution, Father Magnis-Suseso 
insisted, the Social Welfare Department is legally bound to assist the 
terminally ill who cannot pay for treatment on their own.
In theory at least, active and passive euthanasia are illegal under Indonesian 
law. However, Indriyanto Seno Adji, Criminal Law expert at the University of 
Indonesia, is of the opinion that Agian's family could file a request with the 
district court for the right to euthanise. "If the court approves the request," 
Seno Adji said, "then euthanasia will be legal." 
Iskandar Sitorus, chairman of the Medical Legal Aid Institute, shares this view 
adding that the Institute plans to provide Hasan with eight lawyers to fight 
his case.
"Hasan's case has not been regulated by the state. And as long as this matter 
has not been regulated, his request is theoretically valid," he explained. 
Sitorus also rejected the argument that Hasan could be convicted for murder. 
"Where is the logic behind that? He is asking the state to commit euthanasia 
because he won't do it himself." 
Indonesia's Health Minister Achmad Sujudi declined any comment about the case 
but said that euthanasia will never be accepted in the country. 



      

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