A new group campaigning to change the law on assisted dying is due to launch in Brent on Tuesday 25th September 2018.
The group is encouraging local people to come along and get
behind their campaign to allow terminally ill people the right to die on
their own terms. They meet for the first time on Tuesday at Willesden Green
Library at 7pm and anyone is welcome to attend.
Brent is the latest group to join a network of 40 across the
country which supports Dignity in Dying in campaigning for a change in
the law to allow terminally ill, mentally competent adults the option of
an assisted death.
Dignity in Dying has been supporting Noel Conway, a 68-year-old man
from Shropshire who is living with terminal motor neurone disease, to
challenge the current law on assisted dying. He fears that without a
change in the law he may be forced to suffer against his wishes, and
hopes his case will be heard at the Supreme Court in the coming months.
Francesca Hall, Campaigns and Outreach Officer at Dignity in Dying, said:
We believe that terminally ill people in Brent and beyond should be
able to die on their own terms, peacefully, at a time and place of their
choosing – but right now, they can’t. People are taking drastic
measures at home and abroad because the law denies them true choice and
control over their death.
If you agree that this is unacceptable, please join us and come
along to our first local meeting on the 25th of September at Willesden
Library to find out more about Noel’s case, the campaign, and how you
and your community can be part of it.
When: Tuesday 25th September at 7pm
Where: Willesden Green Library, 95 High Road, Willesden NW10 2SF