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WED · 2026-07-15 · 17:29 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0715-93272
News/French MPs approve assisted dying law with strict rules afte…
NSR-2026-0715-93272News Report·EN·Legal & Judicial

French MPs approve assisted dying law with strict rules after years of argument

The bill would allow assisted dying for terminally ill adults who meet strict criteria.

46 minutes agoShareSaveAdd as preferred on GooglePaul KirbyEurope digital editorBBC News - WorldFiled 2026-07-15 · 17:29 GMTLean · CenterRead · 1 min
French MPs approve assisted dying law with strict rules after years of argument
BBC News - WorldFIG 01
Reading time
1min
Word count
200words
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Quality score
50%
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Legal & Judicial
Human Interest
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Key claims

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After two days of reflection, the patient would have to administer a lethal substance themselves.

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The patient would need to 'freely manifest his or her intention' to a doctor, who would then make a decision after consultation within 15 days.

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The bill would allow assisted dying for French adults with a 'serious and incurable' life-threatening illness 'in an advanced or terminal stage'.

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MPs voted by 291 to 241 to back the bill.

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France's National Assembly has voted to create a right to assisted dying under strict conditions.

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Full report

1 min read · 200 words
France's National Assembly has voted to create a right to assisted dying under strict conditions, after years of debate and changes to the proposals.MPs voted by 291 to 241 to back the bill, which had been rejected three times by the upper house of parliament, the Senate.Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu is set to refer parts of the bill to France's Constitutional Council for examination before it can become law.It would allow assisted dying for French adults with a "serious and incurable" life-threatening illness "in an advanced or terminal stage". The illness would need to leave them in constant physical or psychological suffering that is unbearable or resistant to treatment.The patient would need to "freely manifest his or her intention" to a doctor, who would then make a decision after consultation within 15 days.After two days of reflection, the patient would have to administer a lethal substance themselves. If they were unable to do so, it could be done by a doctor or nurse. The patient's decision to go ahead with the procedure would have to be verified by the physician on the day.Wednesday's vote means France could join several other European countries that have decriminalised assisted dying in some form.
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Entities

7 identified