The woman who on April 5 jumped with her daughter from a fifth floor in Avilés (Asturias) has died this Friday at the Central University Hospital of Asturias (HUCA), according to El Comercio.

Saray, 45, has not been able to overcome the serious injuries she suffered as a result of the strong impact, despite the fact that a vehicle parked on the street cushioned her fall, and she died after ten days in hospital. Her daughter, according to the last known medical report, suffered a fracture but her condition was not as serious as her mother’s.

The woman had separated from the girl’s father, whom she had denounced for gender violence, complaints that had been filed. In 2016, the father’s visitation regime was withdrawn from his daughter and a restraining order was imposed on the mother, which was revoked in 2020.

In the days before she decided to jump into the void with her daughter, Justice had returned the visitation regime to the father, something that had greatly annoyed the woman and her family.

In fact, hours before, at dawn, Saray’s father (the minor’s grandfather), 65, had broken the restraining order he had against the girl’s father and had shown up at his house with a knife. . The two got into a fight in the street and were arrested after receiving medical attention for their injuries.

The following day, April 6, the Court of First Instance and Instruction number 5 of Avilés agreed to withdraw the guardianship of the minor from the mother and hand it over to the father, who was released that day after testifying about the confrontation he had with his father-in-law.

The grandfather, for his part, was sent to provisional prison, communicated and without bail for an alleged crime of violation of a restraining order and attempted homicide.

The family tragedy was missing to add the suicide attempt of the girl’s maternal grandmother, who, after learning that her daughter had thrown herself into the void with the little girl, tried to cut her wrists. She was taken to the hospital for her injuries, which were not serious.

According to the criteria of The Trust Project