
After waiting 27 years for aĀ Restoring Territory Rights Bill to return their right to re-legislate voluntary assisted dying, Northern Territorians are furious the Country-Liberal Party has moved to delay action.Ā
Justine Davis, Independent MP for Johnston,Ā moved a motion in the NT Legislative Assembly on May 14 to request Lia Finocchiaroās government adopt the 22 recommendations of the 2024Ā .
āThis is not a theoretical debate; this is not just about politics,ā Davis said. āThis is about real people, real families and real suffering. Itās about Territorians who are asking us, pleading with us, to give them back a basic right ā the right to die with dignity on their own terms.ā
Finocchiaro had previously said that the suffering of the terminally ill and the wishes of 73% of Territorians to restore VAD was ānot a priorityā for her government.
However, it seems that providing resources to delay VAD is. The same day Attorney-General Marie-Clare Boothby announced an amendment asking theĀ Ā to undertake yet another inquiry into the independent inquiry report,Ā to be delivered by the end of September. The committee is comprised of three CLP MPs, one Green and one Labor.
While the increasingly isolated Australian Christian Lobby gloated in the Northern Territory News, advocates of VAD condemned the delay.
Rare eye cancer sufferer and Darwin local Gavin Perry told NT News he would āgo blind and suffer a horrible deathā and that VAD should be available for āwhen your luck runs outā. āIf this present Chief Minister and the Cabinet put their heads in the sand and donāt let this law pass by saying itās not important, or itās not their priority, then they are gutless,ā Gavin said.
Even the NT News editorial described the CLP as āblow hardyā, ātimidā and ātoo cautiousā on anything outside their ālaw and order bubbleā.
āIf the CLP was interested in representing people and not playing politics it would scrap its own parliamentary review and adopt those recommendations,ā the NT News said.
Sue Shearer, CEO of Council on the Ageing, she hopes the committee listens to the 85% of the Territorians already consulted about VAD in 2023 and last year.
āIt appears the wheel is being reinvented with a committee made up of politicians being asked to duplicate the work already completed by an Expert Panel with backgrounds in social justice, law, medicine, psychiatry and palliative medicine,ā Shearer said.
Davis said the committeeās narrow terms of reference will be a positive step towards developing a bill. āI am proud to say that in response to my motion advocating for VAD in the NT, the government has now chosen to move forward and take action that reflects the overwhelming will of the people,ā she said.