Spain adopts euthanasia law

18 March 2021, 17:14

Pro-euthanasia protesters demonstrate in Madrid
Spain Euthanasia Law. Picture: PA

Legislators voted to make Spain the sixth country in the world and the fourth in Europe to allow physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia.

Legislators have voted to make Spain the sixth country in the world, and the fourth in Europe, to allow physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia for long-suffering patients with incurable diseases and for people with unbearable permanent conditions.

The Spanish parliament’s lower house voted 202-140 with two abstentions on the final passage of the euthanasia bill.

Legislators from the left-wing governing coalition and other parties supported it, while conservative and far-right legislators voted “no” and vowed to overturn the legislation in the future.

Health Minister Carolina Darias hailed the passing of the bill as an important step “towards the recognition of human rights”.

“We are heading towards a more humane and fair society,” she told the Congress of Deputies.

Spain Euthanasia Law
Anti-euthanasia protesters stand outside the Spanish Parliament in Madrid, Spain (Paul White/AP)

The bill was the result of a lengthy legislative journey that began three years ago and underwent several rounds of revision in parliamentary committees and in the Senate.

It is expected to go into effect in mid-June, when Spain’s public health system will need to provide life-ending assistance in justified cases.

Euthanasia — when a doctor directly administers fatal drugs to a patient — is either legal or sanctioned by courts in Belgium, Canada, Luxembourg, Colombia, and the Netherlands.

In Switzerland and some US states, medically assisted suicide — when patients self-administer lethal drugs under medical supervision — is permitted.

Politicians in Portugal have tried to pass a law similar to neighbouring Spain’s, but the country’s Constitutional Court this week blocked the legislation, arguing that the bill was imprecise in identifying the circumstances under which life-ending procedures could occur.

Under the new Spanish law, the process for patients to get approval to die can last over a month, with two requests in writing followed up by consultations with medical professionals not previously involved in the case.

Only after a fourth and last statement where patients repeat their desire to die, a regional committee of experts could give the final go-ahead.

The law allows medical workers, whether in the public or private system, to refuse to participate on grounds of belief.

Protesters both in favour and against the new law gathered outside Madrid’s lower house building while legislators voted.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

APTOPIX Trump Hush Money

Jury selection enters pivotal stretch as Trump’s hush money trial resumes

A police forensic officer at the Christ the Good Shepherd church in suburban Wakely in western Sydney, Australia

Sydney bishop says he ‘forgives’ alleged attacker after church stabbing

French construction worker Damien Guerot

French hero gains Australian residency for confronting shopping centre killer

Firefighters work on a building that was partially destroyed after a Russian bombardment in Chernihiv, Ukraine (Francisco Seco/AP)

Russia reports downing five Ukrainian military balloons

Fire and smoke rise out of the Old Stock Exchange, Boersen, in Copenhagen, Denmark

Copenhagen and Paris mayors discuss lessons learned after fires wreck landmarks

Police officers clean the debris from an earthquake in Uwajima, Ehime prefecture, western Japan

Strong earthquake in Japan leaves nine with minor injuries, but no tsunami

Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump meets with Poland’s President Andrzej Duda

Poland’s president becomes latest foreign leader to visit Donald Trump

German far-right politician of the Alternative for Germany (AfD) Bjorn Hocke, centre, attends his trial in the state court in Halle, Germany

Far-right politician stands trial in Germany over alleged use of Nazi slogan

Belgium EU Summit

EU leaders vow to impose tougher sanctions on Iran as Ukraine pleads for support

Asylum seeker Anicet Mayela pictured outside Campsfield House detention centre in Oxfordshire

Asylum seeker raped 15-year-old girl after his deportation flight was blocked by protesting cabin crew

Skye, a Husky dog, sits near floodwater in Dubai

UAE struggles to recover after heaviest recorded rainfall hits desert nation

A man walks past the entrance to the Westfield shopping centre at Bondi Junction in Sydney

Sydney shopping centre reopens after stabbings

Sydney church stabbing: Australian bishop forgives alleged attacker

Australian bishop breaks silence as he 'forgives' alleged attacker following brutal stabbing

Croatia Election

Croatia’s ruling conservatives win parliamentary vote but cannot rule alone

Indonesia Volcano Eruptions

Thousands evacuated and tsunami alert issued after Indonesian volcano eruption

Election 2024 Biden

Joe Biden speaks of WWII history as he calls Donald Trump unfit to lead military