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25-year-old Spanish woman is euthanized despite pleadings of family, friends

A 25-year-old woman who sought for years to end her life after she was separated from her family and survived gang rape was euthanized in Spain March 26 for “chronic pain and debilitating suffering” that followed a suicide attempt.

Hannah Hiester
Hannah Hiester
· 4 min read
25-year-old Spanish woman is euthanized despite pleadings of family, friends

Editor's note: This story contains mentions of suicide and sexual assault. Reader discretion is advised.

A 25-year-old woman who sought for years to end her life after she was separated from her family and survived gang rape was euthanized in Spain March 26 for “chronic pain and debilitating suffering” that followed a suicide attempt.

Physicians ended Noelia Castillo Ramos’ life in a Barcelona hospital despite objections from her family and friends. Her case caught global attention, with numerous pro-life organizations, news outlets, commentators, and social media users highlighting her story, urging her to reconsider her decision, and praying for her. 

When Castillo was 13 years old, the Spanish government removed her from her parents’ custody due to neglect, El País reported. According to social media reports, she was placed in a home along with unaccompanied migrants, where she was abused and gang raped in 2022. Following her assault, she tried to commit suicide by throwing herself from a building roof, leaving her a paraplegic, according to Leading Britain’s Conversation.

She requested euthanasia under Spain’s right-to-die legislation, which the country adopted in 2021, Euro Weekly reported. Her application was granted in July 2024, as she was identified  as  being in an “irreversible” clinical condition causing “severe dependency, chronic pain, and debilitating suffering,” meeting the requirements to qualify for assisted dying, according to El País.

However, her father, assisted by a Catholic legal group, challenged the approval of her euthanasia. The BBC reported that her father argued she was suffering from a personality disorder that affected her judgment and said the state has an obligation to protect the lives of young and vulnerable people.

According to El País, he continued appealing the decision to courts and recently made a last,desperate request for an injunction, which a court denied hours before Castillo’s death.

In a March 25 interview with a Spanish TV channel, Castillo said she was choosing euthanasia to get “rest because I can’t take this family anymore.”

“I can’t take the pain anymore, I can’t take everything that torments me in my head from what I’ve been through,” she said, according to El País.

Following her death, Abogados Cristianos (Christian Lawyers), the legal group that supported her father’s attempts to halt the euthanasia, released a statement calling for the law to be changed. Polonia Castellanos, the group’s president, also took to X to denounce Castillo’s death.

“Noelia has not died, she has been EXECUTED, the Spanish universal healthcare system has not wanted to treat her, @gencat has been victorious in its determination to kill a 25-year-old girl,” Castellanos posted. “March 26, 2026 will remain etched in everyone as the failure of a system that kills and doesn’t treat.”