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Suicide pod use ‘soon’ in Switzerland
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Suicide pod use ‘soon’ in Switzerland

AFP

ZURICH—An assisted dying group expects a new portable suicide pod to be used for the first time in Switzerland potentially within months to provide death without medical supervision, they said Wednesday.

The space-age looking Sarco capsule first unveiled in 2019 replaces the oxygen inside of it with nitrogen, causing death by hypoxia.

The recently formed organization The Last Resort said it saw no legal obstacle to its use in Switzerland, where the law generally allows assisted suicide if the person commits the lethal act themselves.

“Since we have people indeed queuing up, asking to use the Sarco, it’s very likely that it will take place pretty soon. But it’s all I can say,” Last Resort’s chief executive Florian Willet told a press conference.

‘Press this button’

“I cannot imagine a more beautiful way (to die), of breathing air without oxygen until falling into an eternal sleep,” he added.

The person wishing to die must first pass a psychiatric assessment of their mental capacity—a key legal requirement.

The person climbs into the capsule, closes the lid, and is asked automated questions such as who they are, where they are and if they know what happens when they press the button.

A view of the Sarco suicide machine, a 3D-printed capsule that gives the user the ultimate control over the timing of her/his death, created by Australian euthanasia advocate Philip Nitschke, during a presentation by The Last Resort in Zurich, Switzerland, July 17, 2024. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse.

“‘If you want to die,’ the voice says in the processor, ‘Press this button,’” said euthanasia campaigner and Sarco inventor Philip Nitschke.

He said that once the button is pressed, the amount of oxygen in the air plummets from 21 percent to 0.05 percent in less than 30 seconds.

“They will then stay in that state of unconsciousness for … around about 5 minutes before death will take place,” he added.

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No way back

As for someone changing their mind at the very last minute, Nitschke said: “Once you press that button, there’s no way of going back.”

No decision has been made over the time, date and place of the first death, or who the first user might be.

Such details would not be made public until after the event because “we really don’t want a person’s desire for a peaceful passing in Switzerland to turn into a media circus,” said lawyer Fiona Stewart, who is on The Last Resort’s advisory board.

The only cost for the user would be 18 Swiss francs ($20) for the nitrogen.


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