The Prague Post - Euthanasia, a final journey from France to Belgium

EUR -
AED 4.313633
AFN 77.713794
ALL 96.524394
AMD 447.271088
ANG 2.102966
AOA 1077.086691
ARS 1704.045282
AUD 1.778098
AWG 2.117175
AZN 2.003403
BAM 1.956986
BBD 2.35973
BDT 143.176779
BGN 1.95654
BHD 0.442867
BIF 3463.566553
BMD 1.174577
BND 1.51406
BOB 8.095907
BRL 6.484367
BSD 1.17156
BTN 105.962223
BWP 15.47372
BYN 3.45955
BYR 23021.707326
BZD 2.356328
CAD 1.618273
CDF 2660.416461
CHF 0.93373
CLF 0.027483
CLP 1078.168041
CNY 8.272839
CNH 8.264658
COP 4540.327024
CRC 583.728946
CUC 1.174577
CUP 31.126288
CVE 110.331872
CZK 24.394847
DJF 208.627567
DKK 7.4715
DOP 73.741555
DZD 152.030597
EGP 55.921486
ERN 17.618654
ETB 182.136914
FJD 2.683027
FKP 0.874948
GBP 0.878601
GEL 3.165445
GGP 0.874948
GHS 13.497181
GIP 0.874948
GMD 86.336511
GNF 10242.772066
GTQ 8.973439
GYD 245.128571
HKD 9.138754
HNL 30.867526
HRK 7.535149
HTG 153.45713
HUF 389.061014
IDR 19644.798726
ILS 3.80385
IMP 0.874948
INR 105.908659
IQD 1534.771417
IRR 49461.433323
ISK 147.996265
JEP 0.874948
JMD 187.465642
JOD 0.832809
JPY 183.043696
KES 151.461476
KGS 102.71622
KHR 4692.664413
KMF 492.147718
KPW 1057.132618
KRW 1735.954093
KWD 0.360442
KYD 0.976359
KZT 602.614719
LAK 25377.408853
LBP 104915.869411
LKR 362.846018
LRD 207.375689
LSL 19.621641
LTL 3.46822
LVL 0.71049
LYD 6.35258
MAD 10.736007
MDL 19.770225
MGA 5292.982732
MKD 61.550646
MMK 2466.869216
MNT 4167.897674
MOP 9.38753
MRU 46.58225
MUR 54.077812
MVR 18.146906
MWK 2031.544828
MXN 21.150138
MYR 4.797018
MZN 75.0635
NAD 19.621724
NGN 1706.953581
NIO 43.114296
NOK 11.984561
NPR 169.533258
NZD 2.037768
OMR 0.451626
PAB 1.17161
PEN 3.946875
PGK 4.981807
PHP 68.7339
PKR 328.278193
PLN 4.212602
PYG 7869.434629
QAR 4.271189
RON 5.092255
RSD 117.381196
RUB 94.552628
RWF 1705.861297
SAR 4.405582
SBD 9.549564
SCR 17.483387
SDG 706.510869
SEK 10.920588
SGD 1.516873
SHP 0.881237
SLE 28.303449
SLL 24630.294701
SOS 668.376647
SRD 45.43031
STD 24311.37046
STN 24.513814
SVC 10.251821
SYP 12987.480461
SZL 19.617055
THB 36.926343
TJS 10.814154
TMT 4.111019
TND 3.419372
TOP 2.8281
TRY 50.18157
TTD 7.947546
TWD 37.027335
TZS 2899.972792
UAH 49.728023
UGX 4176.531372
USD 1.174577
UYU 45.647667
UZS 14183.052891
VES 324.454785
VND 30929.546335
VUV 142.508743
WST 3.278279
XAF 656.326857
XAG 0.017691
XAU 0.000271
XCD 3.174352
XCG 2.111499
XDR 0.81626
XOF 656.326857
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.960019
ZAR 19.684676
ZMK 10572.605087
ZMW 26.858135
ZWL 378.213284
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    -1.7900

    80.22

    -2.23%

  • RELX

    -0.2600

    40.56

    -0.64%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    23.26

    -0.34%

  • NGG

    1.3900

    77.16

    +1.8%

  • RIO

    1.2000

    77.19

    +1.55%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    48.71

    -0.14%

  • BCE

    -0.1800

    23.15

    -0.78%

  • BTI

    -0.1200

    57.17

    -0.21%

  • CMSD

    -0.1000

    23.28

    -0.43%

  • AZN

    -1.4900

    89.86

    -1.66%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.43

    -0.6%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    76.29

    +0.59%

  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    14.86

    +1.48%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    12.81

    +0.86%

  • BP

    0.7100

    34.47

    +2.06%

Euthanasia, a final journey from France to Belgium
Euthanasia, a final journey from France to Belgium / Photo: Simon Wohlfahrt - AFP

Euthanasia, a final journey from France to Belgium

Born hemiplegic, nearly blind, 43-year-old Lydie Imhoff was gradually losing the use of her limbs. Last year, she made the decision to travel from her native France to Belgium to undergo euthanasia -- for "fear of living in a dead body."

Text size:

An AFP team first joined Lydie in March 2023, to meet with a psychiatrist in Brussels who gave a green light for her to undergo the procedure, made legal in Belgium two decades ago but still outlawed in France.

They travelled with her again early this year, on a final journey from the apartment in eastern France where she lived alone with her pet rabbit, to Brussels where her ashes have now been scattered.

Tuesday, January 30 - Besancon, France

Lydie's apartment lies almost empty, the light of the setting sun glinting at the bay windows. Huddled in her wheelchair, she sighs as her rabbit, Lucky, shuffles around the room. The sound of her breathing echoes through the empty space.

"On the one hand I can't wait for release. On the other I feel guilty for leaving behind the people I love. But at the end of the day, it's a choice I've made," she tells AFP.

The mood is solemn, but that doesn't stop Lydie cracking jokes.

"Don't let me forget to put the keys through the letterbox -- or they'll murder me for it!"

Wednesday, January 31 - departure at dawn

It's still dark outside when Denis Rousseaux and his wife Marie-Josee pull up outside Lydie's home in a rented van. Both retired, the former anaesthetist and nurse have been helping her since 2023 with the process of seeking euthanasia abroad.

Cut off from her family, Lydie relies wholly on the support of a handful of friends and volunteers like these.

Settling on the backseat, she snuggles against Marie-Josee and pulls up her blanket, still flecked with the fur of her rabbit -- which was taken in by a foster family the day before she left.

Once the wheelchair is loaded in, Denis Rousseaux starts the engine. It's the first time the couple have escorted someone to Belgium.

"It's first and foremost a humanitarian gesture," he says, his eyes locked on the road ahead. "The political aspect comes second."

Wednesday, January 31 - lunch at the border

They break the journey in Longwy, a French town just short of the border, where they meet Claudette Pierret, a right-to-die activist who first connected Lydie with Yves de Locht, the Belgian doctor who will perform the procedure.

A table is laid for them -- "It's like a birthday lunch!" quips Lydie, before turning serious.

"I just hope once I'm up there, that I'll be in peace, that I can get some rest," she says.

"I'm tired. I'm tired of every day being a battle -- against my illness, against my disabilities, against everything."

"I know I joke around, I shoot the breeze all day long -- but there you have it."

"What you see here," she says, pointing at her face, "that's not what's really underneath."

After the meal is over, they say goodbye at the front gate. The van sets off again, bound for Brussels. Lydie's day is not over yet. Arrived at the hospital, she settles into a large room, decorated with a seaside theme.

"OK then -- what's the last meal on death row tonight?" she asks.

Wednesday, January 31 - in hospital in Brussels

Before going to sleep, Lydie has a final interview with her doctor about the day ahead.

"Are you still OK to do this?" asks de Locht.

"Yes! You're sure I'm not going to wake up, right?" Lydie replies.

"Tell me what you still have on your mind," he asks.

"I'm thinking of the people I leave behind."

"You know what they will be thinking? However sad they are, they will know you have been set free."

At the end of their talk, Lydie hugs the doctor close. "Your sweater is so soft!" she tells him.

Thursday, February 1

The morning sky in Brussels is a crisp, bright blue. In Lydie's hospital room, the curtains are drawn.

Marie-Josee and Denis Rousseaux are seated on either side of her bed. Farmer protests are disrupting traffic all over the city, but the doctor arrives on time.

He asks Lydie one last time if she wishes to die. She answers yes.

"OK, we'll get the products ready. I'll leave you together for a little longer, and we'll be back in a few minutes."

De Locht is assisted by a fellow doctor, Wim Distelmans, head of the hospital's palliative care unit. In a small laboratory, Distelmans mixes up the substance, using three vials of Thiopental, a barbiturate.

The syringe is ready. The doctors walk together back to Lydie's room, where Denis Rousseaux introduces her to Distelmans.

"So he's the big boss?" she asks -- as the others burst out laughing.

They gather around the bed. Exchange last words. De Locht announces: "Lydie, I bid you farewell."

"See you up there?" she asks him. "All right. Bye bye to you Belgians, bye to the French!"

Lydie's empty wheelchair sits facing the bedroom door, as the doctors emerge back out.

De Locht shares his impressions.

"My feeling is that sickness was killing her little by little, and I put an end to her pain. That is in line with my ethics as a doctor," he says.

"I absolutely don't feel like I killed her. I feel like I cut short her suffering."

Afterwards, together with Distelmans, he finalises the paperwork he will need to submit to the country's oversight commission on euthanasia.

Before leaving, he exchanges a few words with Denis and Marie-Josee Rousseaux. "We set her free," he tells them.

Four days after her death, Lydie was cremated and her ashes scattered in a memorial garden on the outskirts of Brussels, by the staff of the crematorium. No family members were present.

Belgium's 2002 law decriminalizing euthanasia requires at least two professional opinions in support of the patient's decision, one by a psychiatrist and one by a doctor.

It stipulates that the request must stem from a "constant and unbearable physical or mental suffering that can not be alleviated, resulting from a serious and incurable disorder."

In 2022, 2,966 people underwent euthanasia in Belgium, according to the federal oversight commission. Of that total, 53 were resident in France.

Z.Marek--TPP