February 11, 2009 8:49 PM
- Text
Suicide Tourists
(CBS)
They're called suicide tourists because they travel to Switzerland to do one thing: commit suicide.
Under Swiss law, assisted suicide is legal, as long as nobody profits from a death. One Swiss organization is pushing this law to its limits, attracting an increasing number of foreigners who want to take their own lives, and raising serious ethical questions about an act most countries forbid. Correspondent Lara Logan's report will be broadcast on 60 Minutes II tonight, at 9 p.m. ET/PT.
At the time of Logan's interview, Ernst Aschmoneit was an 81-year-old man dying of Parkinson's disease. He told Logan, in an exclusive interview, that he was afraid if he waited any longer to take his own life, he'd be incapacitated by the disease and trapped in Germany, where assisted suicide is against the law. "…My sickness was more and more bad," he says. The only way is to say goodbye before it is too late," he says. When Logan asks Aschmoneit if he feels peaceful with his decision, he responds, "Yeah, with…very small doubts."
Ludwig Minelli has no doubts that he is helping people. He's a human rights lawyer who founded Dignitas as an alternative to other assisted suicide groups in Switzerland. It is the only group to welcome foreigners.
Aschmoneit traveled from Germany to Switzerland to die. Like the nearly 150 people before him, Aschmoneit had to convince Minelli that he was of sound mind and had a consistent wish to die. When asked how he knows from only one conversation with those who want to die that he is doing the right thing, Minelli responds, "Ah, it is not knowing. It is feeling and that is much better than knowing."
The process is quick. Aschmoneit goes to see a Dignitas doctor who prescribes a fatal dosage of a barbiturate. With the lethal drug in hand, Aschmoneit makes his final stop – a rented apartment in Zurich, where Dignitas brings its members to commit suicide.
But not everyone thinks Dignitas is helping people. "If somebody flies into the Zurich airport, is brought into an interview for an hour and prescribed medication that's totally wrong – [then] that's ethically wrong," says psychiatrist Tomas Schlaepfer. "Legally, it might be OK, in Swiss law, but ethically, it's wrong."
Under Swiss law, assisted suicide is legal, as long as nobody profits from a death. One Swiss organization is pushing this law to its limits, attracting an increasing number of foreigners who want to take their own lives, and raising serious ethical questions about an act most countries forbid. Correspondent Lara Logan's report will be broadcast on 60 Minutes II tonight, at 9 p.m. ET/PT.
At the time of Logan's interview, Ernst Aschmoneit was an 81-year-old man dying of Parkinson's disease. He told Logan, in an exclusive interview, that he was afraid if he waited any longer to take his own life, he'd be incapacitated by the disease and trapped in Germany, where assisted suicide is against the law. "…My sickness was more and more bad," he says. The only way is to say goodbye before it is too late," he says. When Logan asks Aschmoneit if he feels peaceful with his decision, he responds, "Yeah, with…very small doubts."
Ludwig Minelli has no doubts that he is helping people. He's a human rights lawyer who founded Dignitas as an alternative to other assisted suicide groups in Switzerland. It is the only group to welcome foreigners.
Aschmoneit traveled from Germany to Switzerland to die. Like the nearly 150 people before him, Aschmoneit had to convince Minelli that he was of sound mind and had a consistent wish to die. When asked how he knows from only one conversation with those who want to die that he is doing the right thing, Minelli responds, "Ah, it is not knowing. It is feeling and that is much better than knowing."
The process is quick. Aschmoneit goes to see a Dignitas doctor who prescribes a fatal dosage of a barbiturate. With the lethal drug in hand, Aschmoneit makes his final stop – a rented apartment in Zurich, where Dignitas brings its members to commit suicide.
But not everyone thinks Dignitas is helping people. "If somebody flies into the Zurich airport, is brought into an interview for an hour and prescribed medication that's totally wrong – [then] that's ethically wrong," says psychiatrist Tomas Schlaepfer. "Legally, it might be OK, in Swiss law, but ethically, it's wrong."
Popular Now in 60 Minutes
- The secret behind the hit TV car show "Top Gear"
- "60 Minutes" Presents: Three Remarkable Women
- Adele opens up about vocal cord surgery
- The Pope and his Jewish maestro
- Top Gear's wild ride
- The Debate On Lowering The Drinking Age
- Can hunting endangered animals save the species?
- Helen Mirren talks nudity and her career
- Defense Secretary, NFL Commissioner, Big Game Hunting
- Katharine Hepburn at her best
- Jake: Math prodigy proud of his autism
- The NFL Commissioner: Roger Goodell
- Classic Morley Safer interviews on "60 Minutes"
- Meryl's men: How does she feel about her co-stars?
- The Defense Secretary: Leon Panetta
- The ascent of Alex Honnold
- A look at the "sovereign citizen" movement
Latest CBS News Headlines
on Facebook
on CBS News
- GDF Suez posts steep drop in earnings
- Gulf carrier Etihad posts first profit of $14M
- NRC sets vote on Georgia nuclear reactors
- India upgrades its military with China in mind
on Facebook
- Calif. surfer runs fastest-growing camera company
- Mo. teen gets life in prison for murder of 9-year-old girl
- Americans getting too much sodium, but not from salty snacks
- Adele opens up about vocal cord surgery
- "Person to Person": Bon Jovi behind the scenes
on CBS News






