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Spain - January 2024

Parliament passes historic constitutional amendments changing language on disabilities

Parliament approved constitutional amendments for the third time in the history of the 1978 Constitution (adopted after the Franco dictatorship). The changes remove the term “handicapped” (“disminuido”) from Article 49 and replace it with “persons with a disability,” a long-sought demand of disability rights advocates, including the Spanish Committee of Representatives of People with Disabilities (CERMI). The amendments additionally introduce a commitment by public administration to pursue policies that “guarantee the complete autonomy and social inclusion of people with disabilities.” President of CERMI, Luis Cayo Pérez Bueno, celebrated the amendments, and stated that they were made “hand-in-hand with civil society, social movements, and people with disabilities, and their families.” The final vote in the Senate on 26 January resulted in 254 votes in favour and three votes against from Vox party MPs, far exceeding the three-fifths majority required for constitutional reform.

 Sources: Euronews, The Guardian, Boletín Oficial del Estado, ConstitutionNet, CERMI (1), CERMI (2)   

Primary categories and factors
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Rights +1 Rights  (+1)
Political Equality
Social Group Equality
Secondary categories and factors
Info
Participation Participation
Civil Society

Supreme Court finds 2021 returns of migrant children to Morocco illegal

On 22 January, the Supreme Court ruled that Spanish authorities acted illegally in 2021 when they returned unaccompanied Moroccan minors, who had crossed the border into the Spanish autonomous city of Ceuta. In May 2021, an estimated 12,000 people circumvented the border fences to enter Ceuta (including approximately 1,500 minors). The Court found the returns contravened the procedure for the repatriation of foreign minors set out in Spanish Immigration Law, and constituted collective expulsion, prohibited by the European Convention on Human Rights. The ruling also determined that Spanish authorities violated the minors’ rights to physical and moral integrity. Spanish officials had argued that a 2007 bilateral agreement with Morocco provided the basis for the decision to return the minors and noted the exceptional circumstances of the 2021 border crossing. The ruling clarified that the 2007 agreement does not constitute sufficient grounds for the return of migrant children.

Sources: Poder Judicial, Pressenza, InfoMigrants, AP

Primary categories and factors
Info
Rights +1 Rights  (+1)
Political Equality
Social Group Equality
Secondary categories and factors
Info
Rule of Law Rule of Law
Personal Integrity and Security

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