06-03-2025
MADRID: A young woman is due to testify in a Spanish court in a bid to persuade a judge to let her die voluntarily against the wishes of her father, in the first case of its kind.
The 23-year-old woman who wants to end her life is paraplegic due to injuries suffered when she tried to take her own life in 2022.
She has the support of the regional government of Catalonia after a local euthanasia guarantee and evaluation board unanimously supported her decision in July 2024.
Euthanasia is the act of deliberately ending a person’s life to relieve suffering. It can be involuntary for example, if a person is in a coma and unable to give their consent or voluntary, as in this case.
The woman was due to die in August, but the process was suspended at the last moment due to legal objections raised by her father, with the backing of the campaign group Christian Lawyers (Abogados Cristianos).
“I feel misunderstood by my family, I feel alone and empty, this situation causes me a great deal of suffering,” the woman has said, according to documents related to the case quoted by Spanish media.
The Catalan government’s legal representation in the case has stated that “no evidence of a scientific or expert character has been presented to contradict the many medical reports which support the decision (to die).”
However, the woman’s father has argued that she is suffering from a personality disorder which affects her judgement and he has pointed to “the obligation of the state to protect the lives of people, especially the most vulnerable, as is the case with a young person with mental health problems.”
He has also said that she has responded well to rehabilitation treatment.
His legal representation has also claimed that the young woman has changed her mind about undergoing euthanasia several times.
The public prosecutor has not positioned itself with regard to the case, instead calling for the judge to hear the opinions of experts and the woman herself before taking a decision.
Among those also due to testify in court in Barcelona today are a member of the euthanasia board which evaluated her case, a neuro-rehabilitation specialist, and a psychiatric specialist.
A euthanasia law was introduced in Spain in 2021 but this is the first time that a case has gone to court for a judge to decide.
Last year, a magistrate in Barcelona rejected an attempt by a man to appeal against his 54-year-old son’s euthanasia after it had been approved by the guarantee and evaluation board.
Earlier in 2021, Spain had passed a law to legalese euthanasia, becoming the fourth country in Europe to allow people to end their own life in some circumstances.
Spain’s lower house of parliament approved the law with support from centre and left-wing parties.
The law allows adults with “serious and incurable” diseases that cause “unbearable suffering” to choose to end their lives.
It is expected to take effect in June.
Before the law’s passage, helping somebody to die in Spain was potentially punishable by a jail term of up to 10 years.
“We have become a country that is more humane, fairer and freer,” Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez tweeted just minutes after the vote. “The euthanasia law, widely demanded by society, has finally become a reality.” (Int’l News Desk)