Dutch clinic sees jump in foreign euthanasia requests after teen's death
The Netherlands' only euthanasia clinic says it has received a surge in calls from overseas from people who want to end their lives, after a flurry of incorrect reports that it had helped a troubled teenager to die.
Since the wrongly reported story about 17-year-old Noa Pothoven went viral, the Levenseindekliniek (End-of-life clinic) in The Hague said it had received at least 25 foreign requests for help.
Pothoven - who published a book about her mental struggles following a childhood rape - was in fact not euthanised, but died on Sunday after refusing to eat and drink, her family and the government have said.
Steven Pleiter, the Levenseindekliniek managing director said it "was not aiming for euthanasia tourist traffic" to the Netherlands.
"That's absolutely not what we are aiming for and why we were set up," he told AFP in an interview.
"A person cannot just come to the Netherlands to be euthanised. It's not like you arrive on Monday and you will have a euthanasia on Friday."
The Netherlands is one of a handful of countries where euthanasia is legal and by law all inhabitants older than 12 are entitled to ask for it - but have to first fulfil a strict set of criteria.
'End...
