
New Delhi, March 24 Harish Rana, the first person in India to be granted passive euthanasia, passed away on Tuesday at AIIMS-Delhi after more than 13 years in a coma, sources said.
The 31-year-old, who has been in a coma since 2013, was transferred from his Ghaziabad home to the palliative care unit at Dr BR Ambedkar Institute Rotary Cancer Hospital at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) on March 14.
Three days before that, the Supreme Court, in a landmark ruling on March 11, allowed passive euthanasia for Harish, who was a BTech student at Panjab University who fell from a fourth-floor balcony in 2013 and suffered severe head injuries.
He had been in a coma since, with artificial nutritional support and occasional oxygen support.
Passive euthanasia is the intentional act of allowing a patient to die by withholding or withdrawing life support or treatment necessary to keep him alive.
Harish's nutritional support was gradually withdrawn after he was admitted to the hospital, sources said on Tuesday.
Harish's family had said after the Supreme Court ruling that withdrawing artificial life support would not bring any personal benefit to the family, but in the larger public interest, the decision could help others facing similar situations.
His father, Ashok Rana, had said passive euthanasia would restore Harish's dignity after years of irreversible suffering.
Pinki Virani, a journalist and activist who filed a petition for euthanasia for Aruna Shanbaug in 2011, thanked the doctors and nurses at AIIMS for “compassionately applying passive euthanasia,” and urged that one should let their family members know “if they would want to exercise this right for themselves”.
“May Harish Rana rest in peace. May his parents and his brother find a quiet peace of their own amid what has been a very long loss for them... I continue to be grateful to the Supreme Court for allowing the right to die with dignity in 2011... It's a choice, and if they so choose, they can help the process by making their wishes – pertaining legally to passive euthanasia – known so that their final exit is free from guilt and trauma,” Virani told