Pubdate: Wed, 7 Oct 1998 Source: Age, The (Australia) Contact: http://www.theage.com.au/ Author: Mary-Anne Toy NITSCHKE'S PLAN TO USE DRUG DEALERS The doctor planning to set up a euthanasia clinic in Melbourne said yesterday he would refer patients to drug dealers if necessary to enable them to die with dignity. Dr Philip Nitschke, pictured, said terminally ill people, mainly elderly cancer sufferers, sometimes resorted to hanging themselves because attempts to overdose on pills failed. ``It is obscene when we have many people going around looking for a lump of rope to take their own lives because they are not able to get access to the right drugs,'' he said. Dr Nitschke said he had contacts who could help: ``My medical background was in helping IV (intravenous) drug users medically and there are enough entrepreneurial narcotics dealers able to see a need and prepared to help access some of these other drugs which aren't widely used as drugs of abuse. ``These people who are generally elderly and dying of cancer, they don't want to have to ... spend their last few weeks sleazing around in some sort of alley trying to contact drug dealers and that's why many of them take all the tablets in the kitchen cabinet but don't die then go out and buy a piece of rope,'' he said. The Premier, Mr Jeff Kennett, who supports euthanasia, said he saw nothing illegal if Dr Nitschke's clinic, due to open next month, only dispensed advice, but the Health Minister, Mr Rob Knowles, said any directing of people to illegal drug sources was a matter for police. The president of Right to Life Victoria, Mrs Margaret Tighe, condemned Dr Nitschke's plans and said he was thumbing his nose at the law and called on the State Government to take action. ``Dr Nitschke believes he will be allowed to do as he pleases at his `death' clinic because of the public statements supporting euthanasia on the part of ... Mr Kennett.'' Another critic, Professor David Kissane from the Centre for Palliative Care at the University of Melbourne, said Dr Nitschke was a ``past master of sensationalism'' and that the Northern Territory voluntary euthanasia law - which was overturned last year after Dr Nitschke helped four people to die - had failed to protect the vulnerable and ensure a high standard of clinical care. The Voluntary Euthanasia Society of Victoria president, Dr Rodney Syme, said he was confident a private members bill to legalise euthanasia would be introduced after the next state election. He said there was enormous unmet demand for euthanasia advice. Dr Nitschke, who moved to Melbourne four months ago, plans to operate his bulk-billing clinic in Templestowe. He said yesterday he already had a waiting list of patients wanting advice. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry