Spain Supreme Court rejects father’s attempt to stop daughter’s euthanasia

Spain’s Supreme Court has dismissed a father’s appeal to prevent his paraplegic daughter’s euthanasia, paving the way for her assisted death under the nation’s permissive 2021 law. The ruling, issued on January 29, 2026, underscores the radical left’s culture of death, where vulnerable individuals—plagued by mental health struggles—are abandoned to irreversible choices rather than offered true compassion and healing.

The young woman, in her 20s, became paraplegic after a 2022 suicide attempt by jumping from a fifth-floor building—a clear sign of profound psychological distress. She sought euthanasia in April 2024, claiming unbearable suffering from her “chronic and disabling” condition. Catalonia’s regional board greenlit the request in August, but her father challenged it, arguing mental disorders impaired her “free and conscious decision” and that her ailment lacked the required “unbearable physical or psychological suffering.”

Lower courts sided against him, and the Supreme Court affirmed.This marks the first judicial review under Spain’s euthanasia statute, which legalized physician-assisted suicide for serious illnesses or permanent conditions—becoming the seventh country worldwide to embrace such barbarism.

Conservative legal group Abogados Cristianos, backing the father, decried the decision as a “serious violation of the basic right to life and a lack of effective legal oversight.” They vow to appeal to the Constitutional Court, fighting for safeguards that honor every life’s divine worth. Euthanasia laws like Spain’s erode protections for the innocent, treating suicide as “dignity” while ignoring redemptive care for the suffering.

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