Irish Daily Mail

Even the hardened lawyers were struggling to speak

- by Robert Hardman

‘And I hope that he is proud of us for fighting’

OF all the courtroom dramas London’s High Courts of Justice have witnessed through the years, few surely can have matched the painful intensity of yesterday’s harrowing climax to the case of the sick baby boy who moved the world.

Connie Yates and Chris Gard had finally come to the most painful conclusion imaginable – that they should, after all, let their boy, Charlie, die. Time, like hope, had finally expired.

The lawyers for all parties had just had their say, as had the judge, Mr Justice Francis. All had agreed that nothing more could be done. Even some of these battle-hardened barristers had been struggling to get through their prepared statements in one piece.

So was there anything, the judge asked, that the parents might like to add?

At which point Connie Yates squeezed out of her pew, followed by her partner, and made for the witness box. A court usher had thoughtful­ly parked a box of tissues on the handrail.

Drawn and drained to the chalky pallor of one who has spent sleepless months at a hospital bedside, the 31-year-old carer was resolute none the less. She had her speech and she was going to make it. Chris Gard stood behind her, stooped and biting his lip.

There followed a mix of deep gratitude, cogent medical argument and burning anger, reaching its crescendo in an unbearably poignant tribute to an ‘absolute warrior’ who ‘has had a greater impact on and touched more people in this world in his 11 months than many people do in a lifetime.’

The what-ifs would haunt them both for the rest of their lives, Connie said, but they would always hold their heads up high. ‘We will always know in our hearts that we did the very best for Charlie. And I hope that he is proud of us for fighting his corner.’

How could he not be? This has been a turbulent, historic legal battle which has touched millions, dragged in the White House, the Vatican and Downing Street and raised serious questions about the rights of parents versus the jurisdicti­on of the courts.

It is one that has generated heated internatio­nal debate. It has also led to ugly online threats against both Great Ormond Street Hospital, for obstructin­g plans to fly Charlie for treatment overseas, and against Charlie’s family for refusing to bow to the British medical establishm­ent. In his conclusion­s yesterday, the judge deplored such threats and ‘the pitfalls of social media when a case such as this goes viral’.

The authoritie­s were certainly not taking any chances, posting security guards at the doors, an extreme measure more appropriat­e to the Old Bailey than the Family Division of the High Court. Once again, a large contingent of internatio­nal media had come to witness the latest stage – no-one knew it would be the last – in this story.

We had come prepared for hours if not days of yet more heated arguments. As he opened the proceeding­s, Grant Armstrong, barrister for Charlie’s

‘He had a real chance of getting better’

parents, was anything but combative.

He began by talking of the new treatments which Chris and Connie ‘had hoped for their offspring’. The word ‘had’ said it all. It meant they were not being hoped for any more.

Charlie had been clinging to a ‘window’ of hope. ‘That window no longer exists,’ he said softly. ‘For Charlie, it’s too late. Time has run out. Irreversib­le muscular damage has been done and the treatment can no longer be a success.’

As news of this grave conclusion was still being tweeted to the wider world, sobbing broke out around the court. The court usher made a beeline for the bench where Chris Gard’s family were sitting, handing them a badly needed box of tissues.

While Mr Armstrong continued to reflect on a pattern of events ‘worthy of a Greek tragedy’, Connie gently rocked from side to side, clearly wanting to get this over with, to get back to her son’s bedside.

Great Ormond Street’s barrister, Katie Gollop QC, looked subdued. ‘We are more sorry than I have words to say,’ she said, and sat down.

After all that they have been through, it would have been no surprise if Chris and Connie had chosen not to come to court at all yesterday. There was no longer anything to fight for. Instead, they wanted to set the record straight and leave no-one in any doubt – least of all Charlie – that this had been a just, honourable and entirely rational campaign.

‘This is one of the hardest things that we will ever have to say and we are about to do the hardest thing that we’ll ever have to do,’ Connie began, prompting fresh sniffles around this red-eyed court.

It was a magisteria­l, 2,000-word address, going back over all the arguments without yielding on any of them.

‘This has never been about “parents know best”. We have continuous­ly listened to experts in this field,’ she said. ‘We didn’t keep him alive just because we couldn’t bear to lose him. Charlie had a real chance of getting better. It’s now unfortunat­ely too late for him.’

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 ??  ?? Farewell: Charlie’s grandparen­ts gave what they thought were their final kisses goodbye earlier this year Grief: Connie Yates and Chris Gard in London’s High Court of Justice yesterday
Farewell: Charlie’s grandparen­ts gave what they thought were their final kisses goodbye earlier this year Grief: Connie Yates and Chris Gard in London’s High Court of Justice yesterday

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