PARIS -- A terminally ill minor has been helped to die in Belgium for the first time since the country did away with age restrictions on euthanasia two years ago, according to the senator who wrote the law.
Liberal Senator Jean-Jacques De Gucht confirmed the death of the sick juvenile on Saturday.
He said the minor was from Belgium's Flemish region but declined to provide other details about the patient to protect the privacy of the grieving family.
Belgium is the only country that allows minors of any age assistance in dying, De Gucht said.
In Holland, the lower age limit for euthanasia is 12 years.
"It's terrible when a younger suffers, but it gives me some comfort to know that now there is a choice out there for children in the final terminal stages," De Gucht said. "It's important that society doesn't neglect people in such pain."
The Belgian law has strict rules for euthanasia to be approved.
It requires the minor to be in the final stages of a terminal illness, to understand the difference between life and death rationally and to have asked to end his or her life on repeated occasions.
It also requires parental consent and finally the approval of two doctors, including a psychiatrist.
The law -- one of the most far-reaching in the Western world -- had wide public support when it was introduced in 2014 but was opposed by some pediatricians and the country's Roman Catholic clergy.
As House of Representative members cast their ballots and an electronic tally board lit up with enough green lights to indicate the measure would carry, a lone protester in the chamber shouted "assassins!"
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