The Prague Post - Resilient young woman leads fight for euthanasia in Mexico

EUR -
AED 4.200723
AFN 73.205005
ALL 93.907393
AMD 420.509211
ANG 2.047918
AOA 1049.466263
ARS 1708.149372
AUD 1.647205
AWG 2.061755
AZN 1.946975
BAM 1.954913
BBD 2.304454
BDT 141.075993
BGN 1.934082
BHD 0.431404
BIF 3403.255911
BMD 1.143831
BND 1.47653
BOB 7.923405
BRL 5.914025
BSD 1.144181
BTN 109.003544
BWP 15.431998
BYN 3.319694
BYR 22419.088252
BZD 2.301156
CAD 1.623943
CDF 2569.044491
CHF 0.918871
CLF 0.026901
CLP 1058.749635
CNY 7.765582
CNH 7.759858
COP 3847.454374
CRC 521.263498
CUC 1.143831
CUP 30.311522
CVE 110.214994
CZK 24.183162
DJF 203.747558
DKK 7.471144
DOP 67.779248
DZD 152.54279
EGP 56.38967
ERN 17.157465
ETB 183.472557
FJD 2.585573
FKP 0.856609
GBP 0.857123
GEL 3.013924
GGP 0.856609
GHS 12.998103
GIP 0.856609
GMD 82.953289
GNF 10034.447278
GTQ 8.732038
GYD 239.331413
HKD 8.970832
HNL 30.624106
HRK 7.534984
HTG 149.652101
HUF 353.186418
IDR 20582.553145
ILS 3.429949
IMP 0.856609
INR 108.910443
IQD 1498.819972
IRR 1573854.310105
ISK 144.031605
JEP 0.856609
JMD 181.127821
JOD 0.810949
JPY 184.506234
KES 147.942877
KGS 100.025394
KHR 4581.92114
KMF 492.991337
KPW 1029.44833
KRW 1748.660276
KWD 0.35492
KYD 0.953567
KZT 541.084505
LAK 25835.278295
LBP 102459.113353
LKR 383.236122
LRD 207.66578
LSL 18.55858
LTL 3.377436
LVL 0.691892
LYD 7.333673
MAD 10.699845
MDL 20.125869
MGA 4850.799148
MKD 61.607048
MMK 2401.911729
MNT 4097.371745
MOP 9.242806
MRU 45.663282
MUR 53.817392
MVR 17.683393
MWK 1984.099796
MXN 19.99324
MYR 4.656534
MZN 73.102176
NAD 18.55858
NGN 1567.140307
NIO 42.100898
NOK 11.228062
NPR 174.40587
NZD 2.00254
OMR 0.44118
PAB 1.144181
PEN 3.893334
PGK 5.026719
PHP 70.346759
PKR 318.103973
PLN 4.288792
PYG 6956.843616
QAR 4.182602
RON 5.22502
RSD 117.323769
RUB 88.086988
RWF 1675.040019
SAR 4.295971
SBD 9.217609
SCR 15.403012
SDG 686.87736
SEK 11.040681
SGD 1.477017
SHP 0.853985
SLE 27.852662
SLL 23985.569044
SOS 653.903318
SRD 42.969122
STD 23674.993003
STN 24.488889
SVC 10.011458
SYP 126.430044
SZL 18.555581
THB 38.118202
TJS 10.606288
TMT 4.014847
TND 3.376868
TOP 2.754071
TRY 53.521387
TTD 7.754482
TWD 36.531701
TZS 3004.636769
UAH 50.95788
UGX 4176.105262
USD 1.143831
UYU 46.019121
UZS 13706.781107
VES 730.797387
VND 30078.180851
VUV 136.037644
WST 3.172049
XAF 655.659521
XAG 0.018325
XAU 0.000274
XCD 3.091261
XCG 2.062064
XDR 0.81543
XOF 655.659521
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.145205
ZAR 18.568095
ZMK 10295.852574
ZMW 21.023461
ZWL 368.313126
  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.15

    -0.14%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    21.99

    +0.18%

  • NGG

    2.6700

    82.85

    +3.22%

  • RIO

    1.0700

    94.42

    +1.13%

  • GSK

    2.3600

    53.66

    +4.4%

  • RYCEF

    0.5400

    19.68

    +2.74%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    21.42

    +1.87%

  • BTI

    1.2100

    61.77

    +1.96%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    31.93

    +1.72%

  • RBGPF

    2.5400

    68.15

    +3.73%

  • BP

    1.2500

    37.4

    +3.34%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    75.93

    +0.59%

  • AZN

    11.2900

    195.15

    +5.79%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    13.15

    +1.06%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13

    +0.46%

Resilient young woman leads fight for euthanasia in Mexico
Resilient young woman leads fight for euthanasia in Mexico / Photo: Herika Martinez - AFP

Resilient young woman leads fight for euthanasia in Mexico

Samara Martinez, a young Mexican woman who is sick and dying, smiles as she asks her many TikTok followers a difficult question.

Text size:

The 30-year-old lives with several chronic and degenerative diseases, including kidney failure, and spends 10 hours a day hooked up to a dialysis machine to survive.

"Instead of seeking euthanasia, why don't I just unplug the machine and say goodbye?" Martinez, a journalist by trade, says in her video.

She then explains to her nearly 400,000 followers what it is like to suffer from several terminal diseases -- and why she is spearheading a campaign to legalize a person's right to euthanasia in Mexico.

As she prepares to answer her initial question, the camera zooms in on Martinez's face for a close-up.

"Because I do not want to suffer and I want to die with dignity," she says.

A paradox is at work here: as she advocates for such a gravely serious issue as death, Martinez does so with vigor, enthusiasm and creativity over social media.

Her work helps her "stay alive," Martinez told AFP during an interview at her home in the city of Chihuahua in northern Mexico.

"Social media also serves to change the world," said Martinez, who feels that before she became a social media influencer she was an "agent of change."

After undergoing two failed kidney transplants, and with no possibility of being cured, in August she launched her campaign for Mexico to give people the right to die with dignity.

"I am going to be the person who legalizes euthanasia in Mexico," said Martinez.

She expressed confidence that she will succeed because, unlike previous campaigns with the same goal, this time it is a sick patient at the forefront.

Earlier this month, Uruguay became the first country in Latin America to decriminalize euthanasia through a law passed by congress. Colombia and Ecuador did the same in 1997 and 2024, respectively, through court rulings.

- For love and respect -

After more than a decade striving to get healthy, deciding she was ready to die posed a dilemma for Martinez.

She asked her parents what they thought. "We support you," she said they told her.

"I am doing it for myself, and for the respect I have for my body, and because I love myself so much. That is what is behind all this," said Martinez.

With stoicism and good humor that could stun the many people who watch her online, Martinez explains her end-of-life decision.

"It is not that I gave up. Rather, I have unblocked that part of understanding which says death is not an enemy, that it is not pain. Death is a sister, a friend, and one embraces it."

Sitting in her office at a university in Chihuahua, where she is a tenured professor, Martinez analyzes her options.

She says in a steady voice that no one can make her keep doing dialysis.

"I would take 15 days to die, but those would be 15 days of agony and suffering because your whole body is poisoned. You can drown in your own liquids. It is a very undignified death," said Martinez.

To stop dialysis, she said, would be a form of passive euthanasia -- withholding treatment that would keep a dying person alive.

Another option is to resort to a law in Mexico under which a person sound of mind can ask that their life not be prolonged artificially and they only be given palliative care until they die.

This week, Martinez herself will present to the Mexican Senate a bill to make euthanasia part of Mexico's body of law, letting people decide when they want to die and to do so without unnecessary suffering.

The lower chamber of congress must also approve the initiative.

"It is high time we stopped penalizing compassion," said Martinez.

She has amassed 118,000 signatures on a petition backing her idea and is now trying to win over lawmakers.

When the time comes, Martinez envisions expiring by the sea, at dusk, with a quiet ceremony.

"A celebration of life with my family, surrounded by people I love and who love me, and going peacefully, with no pain," she said.

S.Danek--TPP