What Happened
- On March 11, 2026, the Supreme Court of India delivered a historic judgment in Harish Rana v. Union of India (2026 INSC 222), allowing withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment for a patient in a permanent vegetative state — the first time the court has practically applied India's passive euthanasia framework.
- Harish Rana, then 32, had suffered a diffuse axonal brain injury after falling from the fourth floor of his residential accommodation in 2013 while pursuing his undergraduate degree; he had since been in a permanent vegetative state with 100% quadriplegia.
- His father petitioned the Delhi High Court in 2024 seeking permission to withdraw clinically administered nutrition (CAN/tube feeding); the High Court dismissed the plea; the family then approached the Supreme Court.
- The Supreme Court ordered medical board review; the board confirmed there was zero prospect of neurological recovery; the court then permitted withdrawal of CAN under medical supervision.
- Harish Rana passed away at AIIMS New Delhi on March 24, 2026 at 4:10 PM — the first confirmed death following court-sanctioned passive euthanasia in India.
Static Topic Bridges
Common Cause v. Union of India (2018) — The Governing Framework
The 2018 Common Cause judgment by a nine-judge bench is the foundational precedent for passive euthanasia in India. It held that the right to die with dignity is a fundamental right under Article 21, and established the legal and procedural framework for both passive euthanasia and advance medical directives (living wills).
- A "living will" is a written advance directive made by a competent adult specifying that life support should be withheld if they later become terminally ill or permanently vegetative.
- Procedure under 2018 framework: (1) Hospital Medical Board certifies condition; (2) Judicial Magistrate First Class grants final authorisation.
- The 2023 modification by the Supreme Court simplified this procedure — replaced the Judicial Magistrate requirement with approval by a second independent hospital-constituted Medical Board — reducing delays significantly.
- Active euthanasia (deliberate lethal act) and physician-assisted suicide remain illegal in India.
- The Aruna Shanbaug case (2011) was the earlier precedent that recognised passive euthanasia in principle, though it was denied in that instance.
Connection to this news: The Harish Rana case is the first real-world application of the Common Cause framework; it demonstrates the procedural pathway families must follow and the high bar of medical certainty required before the court sanctions withdrawal of treatment.
Article 21 — Right to Life and Dignity
Article 21 of the Constitution guarantees that no person shall be deprived of their life or personal liberty except according to procedure established by law. The Supreme Court has interpreted "life" not merely as biological existence but as life with dignity — including the right to die with dignity when life has been reduced to a permanently vegetative state by irrecoverable injury.
- Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India (1978): Article 21 requires procedure to be just, fair, and reasonable.
- K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017): Right to privacy includes bodily autonomy — foundational to the argument for advance directives.
- The court in Common Cause (2018) held: "The Constitution cannot be interpreted in a manner that would compel a person to live in a state that is nothing but a prolonged death."
- The right to die with dignity is distinct from the right to commit suicide — the latter is addressed under Section 115 of the Mental Healthcare Act, 2017 (decriminalised for persons with mental illness).
Connection to this news: The Harish Rana judgment reaffirms that Article 21 protects the quality and dignity of life, not merely its continuation — and that 13 years in a permanent vegetative state with no prospect of recovery is incompatible with the constitutional guarantee of dignity.
Medical Ethics and End-of-Life Care
The passive euthanasia debate sits at the intersection of law, medicine, and ethics. The distinction between passive euthanasia (legally permissible) and active euthanasia (illegal) rests on the doctrine of "acts and omissions" — withdrawing treatment that is no longer benefiting the patient is a permissible medical omission, whereas administering a lethal agent is an impermissible act.
- Clinically Administered Nutrition (CAN) — tube feeding — is classified as a medical intervention, not basic care; it can legally be withdrawn if a medical board certifies futility.
- Persistent Vegetative State (PVS): a condition of wakefulness without awareness following severe brain injury; distinguished from brain death (where all brain function ceases) and minimally conscious state.
- Palliative care is the recommended medical alternative — focusing on relief from pain and suffering while allowing natural death.
- The Indian Medical Council (Professional Conduct, Etiquette and Ethics) Regulations acknowledge the legitimacy of withdrawing futile treatment.
Connection to this news: The AIIMS Medical Board's certification that Harish Rana had zero prospect of neurological recovery was the crucial trigger — without medical consensus, the Supreme Court would not have granted permission; the case illustrates how medical science and constitutional law must work in tandem on end-of-life decisions.
Key Facts & Data
- Harish Rana v. Union of India (2026 INSC 222): SC order on March 11, 2026; patient died March 24, 2026 at AIIMS Delhi — India's first court-approved passive euthanasia death.
- Patient: diffuse axonal brain injury since 2013; PVS + 100% quadriplegia; aged 32 at time of SC petition.
- Common Cause v. Union of India (2018): nine-judge bench; legalised passive euthanasia and living wills under Article 21.
- 2023 SC modification: replaced Judicial Magistrate with second independent Hospital Medical Board.
- Active euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide: still illegal in India.
- Aruna Shanbaug case (2011): prior landmark; recognised passive euthanasia in principle for the first time.