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Date Published: 27/03/2026
Spanish woman left paralysed after gang rape dies by euthanasia aged 25
Noelia Castillo spent years fighting for the right to die on her own terms, even as her own father tried to stop her

A 25-year-old Spanish woman who was left paralysed following a horrific gang rape has died by euthanasia in Catalonia, bringing an end to a deeply painful journey that touched on some of the most difficult questions around personal autonomy, family conflict and the limits of the law.
Noelia Castillo died on Thursday March 27 after years of chronic physical pain and profound psychological suffering. Her life changed irreversibly in 2022 when, in the aftermath of a sexual assault, she attempted to take her own life. The attempt left her with a severe spinal cord injury and paralysed from the waist down.
She later described further suicide attempts during her time in psychiatric care, explaining in her only interview that she had always been certain about what she wanted.
"I was very clear about it from the beginning," she said.
Noelia formally requested euthanasia in April 2024 and it was approved three months later. What followed was a prolonged legal battle initiated by her father, who challenged the decision through multiple courts including the High Court of Justice of Catalonia, the Supreme Court, the Constitutional Court and ultimately the European Court of Human Rights.
Every appeal was dismissed, with the courts consistently ruling that Noelia had full capacity to make her own decision.
She described her father's opposition as a source of deep additional pain, recounting that he had accused her of being cold and heartless for pursuing her wish to die.
"My father started yelling at me, telling me I had no heart, that I was very cold, that I didn't feel or suffer," she recalled.
Despite everything, she said she held no grudge.
Noelia passed away in her own room, wearing her favourite clothes, on her own terms.
Spain legalised euthanasia in 2021 for those with serious and incurable conditions who are experiencing intolerable suffering, although cases like Noelia's continue to prompt difficult debate about how the law protects those in the most vulnerable situations.
Image: Freepik
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