Canadian army vet and paralympian slams government's EUTHANASIA offer when she asked for a stairlift

Canadian army vet and paralympian slams government's EUTHANASIA offer when she asked for a stairlift
A government official offered Christine Gauthier, an paralympian army veteran who had asked for a wheelchair lift to be installed in her home, a device for medically assisted dying (Alex Menendez/Getty Images for Invictus Games)

DORVAL, CANADA: Christine Gauthier, a Paralympic army veteran who asked a wheelchair lift be built in her home, said that she was horrified when a government official in Canada offered to give her euthanasia equipment.

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CBC reported that former army official Gauthier, a competitor at the 2016 Paralympics in Rio de Janeiro, testified on Thursday, December 1, that a caseworker for veterans' affairs had drafted an offer to give her a device for medically assisted dying. Gauthier, 52, told a House of Commons veterans affairs committee, "I have a letter saying that if you're so desperate, madam, we can offer you MAID, medical assistance in dying," according to the CBC. It was reported that three additional disabled army officials received the same device. Gauthier said that she had written to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, voicing her concerns.