SC to decide today on plea for passive euthanasia
Passive Euthanasia in India — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- Passive euthanasia = withdrawal of life-sustaining medical treatment (e.g., ventilator, feeding tubes) to allow natural death; distinct from active euthanasia (direct act to end life), which remains illegal in India. [S1]
- The Supreme Court (SC) in Common Cause v. Union of India (2018) recognised Right to Die with Dignity as a fundamental right under Article 21 of the Constitution. [S1]
- The Harish Rana case (2026) became the first judicially sanctioned passive euthanasia in India — a milestone in translating the 2018 ruling into practice. [S2]
- Directly relevant to GS-II (Judiciary, Fundamental Rights) and GS-IV (Ethics, Bioethics). High-priority for Prelims MCQs and Mains essays.
2. Why in the News
- 15 January 2026: A Bench of Justices J.B. Pardiwala and K.V. Viswanathan was scheduled to pass a final order on a petition for withdrawal of life support to Harish Rana, 31, who had been in a Permanent Vegetative State (PVS) since 2013 after falling from the fourth floor of his paying guest accommodation. [S3]
- The judges personally met Harish's parents and younger brother, who unanimously requested that his suffering be ended. [S3]
- Additional Solicitor-General Aishwarya Bhati (appearing for the Centre) submitted that both primary and secondary medical boards agreed treatment should be discontinued. [S3]
- 11 March 2026: SC delivered the final order permitting withdrawal — the first-ever execution of passive euthanasia in India. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1994 | P. Rathinam v. Union of India — SC held the right to life includes right to die (later overruled). |
| 1996 | Gian Kaur v. State of Punjab — SC overruled P. Rathinam; held right to life under Art. 21 does not include right to die. |
| 2011 | Aruna Shanbaug v. Union of India — SC permitted passive euthanasia for the first time in principle via court-approved withdrawal; laid down guidelines pending legislature. [S1] |
| 2018 | Common Cause v. Union of India — Five-judge Constitution Bench: (a) Right to Die with Dignity = Fundamental Right under Art. 21; (b) Living Will / Advance Directive legalised; (c) Two-tier medical board process prescribed. [S1] |
| 2023 | SC streamlined the 2018 guidelines — simplified living will execution procedures; reduced bureaucratic burden on notarisation. [S1] |
| 2013 | Harish Rana sustained injuries; enters PVS. [S2] |
| 2024 | Family petitioned Delhi High Court — rejected (Harish not on mechanical ventilator). [S2] |
| Jan 2026 | Family petitioned SC; 12-page order recorded judges' personal meeting with family. [S3] |
| Mar 2026 | SC passed final order permitting withdrawal; AIIMS New Delhi initiated palliative care protocol. [S2] |
4. Core Static Facts
- Passive Euthanasia: Withdrawal or withholding of medical treatment (ventilator, CANH — Clinically Assisted Nutrition and Hydration via PEG/nasogastric tubes) allowing natural death. [S2]
- Active Euthanasia: Administration of lethal substance to end life — remains illegal in India.
- Living Will / Advance Directive: Written document by a competent adult refusing specific future medical treatment if in PVS/terminal illness. Legalised by Common Cause 2018. [S1]
- Permanent Vegetative State (PVS): Condition of wakefulness without awareness; patient cannot recover meaningful consciousness; recognised trigger for passive euthanasia petitions.
- Two-Tier Medical Board (per Common Cause 2018):
- Primary Board: Hospital doctors certify PVS/terminal condition and recommend withdrawal.
- Secondary Board: Government-appointed doctors (including district CMO) review and confirm. [S1]
- Key Constitutional Article: Article 21 — Right to Life and Personal Liberty; interpreted to include Right to Die with Dignity. [S1]
- Key Judgment: Common Cause v. Union of India, (2018) 5 SCC 1 — Constitution Bench. [S1]
- Implementing authority for court-approved cases: Supreme Court / High Court (in absence of living will).
- CANH ruling (2026): Harish Rana case expanded the definition of "medical treatment" to include feeding tubes — critical extension of the 2018 framework. [S2]
- First-ever execution of passive euthanasia in India: Harish Rana, March 2026, AIIMS New Delhi. [S2]
- Harish Rana's condition: 100% quadriplegic disability; PVS since August 2013 (aged ~19); 13+ years. [S2]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Art. 21 jurisprudence: SC has progressively expanded from bare survival (Kharak Singh) → dignified life (Maneka Gandhi) → dignified death (Common Cause). [S1]
- Aruna Shanbaug (2011) was the pivotal bridge — SC acknowledged passive euthanasia but left a legislative gap; Common Cause (2018) filled it constitutionally. [S1]
- Harish Rana ruling clarified that CANH is a "medical treatment" and not merely basic care — resolving a critical ambiguity in the 2018 framework. [S2]
- Active euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide remain outside the legal framework; India has no legislation (like the Netherlands' Termination of Life on Request Act) expressly covering them.
Ethical / Governance
- Autonomy vs. Sanctity of Life: The living will framework prioritises individual autonomy; opponents cite potential for misuse against vulnerable/disabled persons. [S1]
- Family consent vs. individual will: Where no advance directive exists (as in Harish Rana), the court balances family wishes, medical opinion, and state interest. [S3]
- The SC's personal meeting with the family (unprecedented step noted in the 12-page order) underscores the gravity the court attaches to life-and-death decisions. [S3]
- Role of the state: ASG Aishwarya Bhati's submission on behalf of the Centre that "nature should take its own course" signals executive alignment with the judicial framework. [S3]
Social
- PVS patients are predominantly cared for by families with enormous financial, emotional, and physical burden — passive euthanasia framework addresses caregiver rights alongside patient rights.
- Delhi High Court's rejection (2024) on the ground that Harish was not on a ventilator revealed procedural gaps — SC's 2026 ruling expanded the scope. [S2]
- Implications for disability rights: Critics argue the framework could be weaponised against persons with severe disabilities who can still experience quality of life.
Administrative
- Two-tier medical board remains the key implementation bottleneck — delays in government-appointed secondary board convening have been widely reported.
- Post-2023 SC simplification: living will no longer requires notarisation; execution before two witnesses + first-class judicial magistrate (JMFC) suffices. [S1]
- States are primarily responsible for constituting and operationalising the secondary medical boards — federal implementation gap identified. [S4]
Historical
- India's trajectory contrasts with global peers: Netherlands/Belgium permit active euthanasia; UK permits withdrawal of treatment (Bland 1993); US has state-level advance directive laws.
- Aruna Shanbaug (2011) — nurse in PVS for 42 years after sexual assault (1973); SC rejected hospital staff's plea but laid down guidelines; Aruna died naturally in 2015.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 months)
- January 2026: SC Bench (Pardiwala & Viswanathan JJ.) issues 12-page interim order in Harish Rana case; meets family personally; records both family consent and medical board consensus for withdrawal. [S3]
- January 15, 2026: Final order scheduled (article date). [S3]
- March 11, 2026: SC formally allows withdrawal of life support — India's first judicially sanctioned passive euthanasia execution. [S2]
- March 2026: AIIMS New Delhi initiates palliative care protocol; Harish Rana subsequently dies — end of a 13-year PVS. [S2]
- Key legal expansion: SC rules CANH (PEG/nasogastric tubes) = medical treatment; can be withdrawn under the passive euthanasia framework. [S2]
- 2023 (prior): SC simplified Advance Directive execution procedures, removing notarisation requirement. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks
- Right to Die with Dignity was declared a Fundamental Right under Article 21 in Common Cause v. Union of India, (2018) 5 SCC 1. [S1]
- The Common Cause 2018 judgment was delivered by a five-judge Constitution Bench. [S1]
- Active euthanasia is illegal in India; only passive euthanasia (withdrawal of treatment) is permitted under judicial oversight. [S1]
- A Living Will (Advance Directive) allows a competent adult to refuse specific future medical treatments — legalised in India by Common Cause 2018. [S1]
- Passive euthanasia in India requires clearance from a two-tier medical board (Primary + Secondary). [S1]
- After 2023 SC modification: Advance Directive execution requires two witnesses + JMFC (not a notary). [S1]
- Aruna Shanbaug v. Union of India (2011) was the first SC case to permit passive euthanasia in principle, predating the Common Cause constitutional recognition. [S1]
- Harish Rana (fell from fourth floor, 2013; 100% quadriplegic, PVS) was the subject of India's first judicially sanctioned passive euthanasia in March 2026. [S2]
- The Delhi High Court rejected the Harish Rana family's plea in 2024 on the ground that he was not on a mechanical ventilator. [S2]
- The SC in the Harish Rana case ruled that CANH (feeding via PEG/nasogastric tubes) constitutes "medical treatment" that can be withdrawn. [S2]
- The SC bench in the Harish Rana case comprised Justices J.B. Pardiwala and K.V. Viswanathan. [S3]
- ASG Aishwarya Bhati represented the Centre and supported withdrawal in the Harish Rana case. [S3]
- Post-SC order, Harish Rana was shifted to palliative care at AIIMS, New Delhi. [S2]
- Gian Kaur v. State of Punjab (1996) — SC held Art. 21 does NOT include the right to die (later qualified by Common Cause 2018 to carve out dignified death). [S1]
8. Mains Relevance
| GS Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-II | Structure, Organization and Functioning of the Judiciary; Fundamental Rights |
| GS-IV | Ethics and Human Interface; Bioethics; Attitude and Aptitude |
| GS-I | (marginally) Social issues — End-of-life care, changing social values |
Plausible Mains Questions:
-
"The Supreme Court's ruling in Common Cause (2018) and the Harish Rana case (2026) together constitute a constitutional revolution in end-of-life jurisprudence in India." Critically examine. (GS-II)
-
"Passive euthanasia raises complex questions at the intersection of individual autonomy, medical ethics, and the state's duty to protect life. Discuss with reference to India's legal framework." (GS-IV)
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"Should India enact a comprehensive legislation on end-of-life care to replace the current judge-made framework? Examine the arguments for and against." (GS-II)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Article 21 Jurisprudence | Right to Die is a direct extension of the right to life with dignity; essential contextual grounding. |
| Aruna Shanbaug Case (2011) | Immediate precursor; set the stage for Common Cause 2018. |
| Living Will / Advance Directive | Core instrument legalised by Common Cause; mechanism of passive euthanasia without court. |
| Medical Ethics & Bioethics | Doctor's role in withdrawal of treatment; Hippocratic oath tension; relevant to GS-IV. |
| Disability Rights in India (RPwD Act, 2016) | Intersection with passive euthanasia; risk of ableism in PVS determinations. |
| Palliative Care Policy in India | Administrative complement — NHM palliative care guidelines; WHO palliative care standards. |
| Mental Healthcare Act, 2017 | Contains advance directive provisions for mental illness — parallel legal framework. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
-
Confusing Active and Passive Euthanasia: Active euthanasia (lethal injection) = illegal in India. Only passive euthanasia is permitted. Aspirants sometimes conflate the two.
-
Wrong judgment for Fundamental Right declaration: The right to die with dignity as a Fundamental Right was declared in Common Cause (2018), NOT in Aruna Shanbaug (2011). Aruna Shanbaug permitted passive euthanasia but did not pronounce on it as a Fundamental Right.
-
Living Will ≠ Euthanasia request: A Living Will is an advance refusal of specific treatments; it does not grant family/doctors a blanket right to end life. The two-tier medical board process is still mandatory.
-
Wrong year for Common Cause: The judgment year is 2018, reported as (2018) 5 SCC 1. Aspirants sometimes write 2017 (when arguments concluded) or 2011 (confusing with Aruna Shanbaug).
-
Harish Rana case origin: The family first approached the Delhi High Court (rejected, 2024), then the Supreme Court — not directly the SC. This procedural detail is MCQ-trap territory.
11. Sources
- [S1] Common Cause v. Union of India – Legal Framework Summary — https://www.drishtiias.com/daily-updates/daily-news-editorials/passive-euthanasia-in-india-and-the-right-to-die-with-dignity — (Tier 4 / reference)
- [S2] SC Allows 1st Passive Euthanasia in Harish Rana Case — https://www.drishtiias.com/daily-updates/daily-news-analysis/sc-allows-1st-passive-euthanasia-in-harish-rana-case — (Tier 4 / reference)
- [S3] The Hindu article (15 Jan 2026): "SC to decide today on plea for passive euthanasia" — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-01-15/th_international/articleGR1FEM3CS-13123756.ece — (Tier 4, primary article supplied)
- [S4] Deccan Herald — Primary responsibility of states on implementing passive euthanasia — https://www.deccanherald.com/amp/story/india/primary-responsibility-of-states-govt-on-implementing-passive-euthanasia-in-healthcare-system-3642508 — (Tier 4)