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A terminally ill British woman has lost her final legal bid to be allowed to die.
The European Court of Human Rights ruled on Monday that the refusal of the British courts to allow Diane Pretty's husband to help her to die did not disregard her human rights.
The decision marks the end of the legal road for 43-year-old Mrs Pretty, who is in the advanced stages of motor neurone disease.
Speaking at a news conference in London, Mrs Pretty's husband Brian criticised the ruling in her case and urged the public to back a campaign to lobby the government to change the law to allow voluntary euthanasia.
Mrs Pretty, who is paralysed from the neck down, also criticised the verdict. Speaking with the aid of a computer, she said: "The law has taken all my rights away."
Mr Pretty told journalists: "I am pleased in one respect because I have my wife with me a little longer but I am very sad because her choice on when she should die has been taken away from her."
Public campaign
He urged members of the public to sign a petition, available on Diane's website, to back a change in the law.
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