Khaleej Times

Italy grants citizenshi­p to terminally-ill British toddler

- AFP

rome — Italy granted citizenshi­p to terminally-ill British toddler Alfie Evans on Monday, in a bid to facilitate his transfer to a hospital in Rome after the UK Supreme Court upheld a ruling to turn off his life support.

The 23-month-old child, has been in a coma for over a year and needs a ventilator to keep him breathing due to a rare degenerati­ve neurologic­al condition.

His parents want to take their son to be treated at the paediatric Bambino Gesu hospital in Rome, which is administer­ed by the Vatican.

“Foreign Minister Angelino Alfano and Interior Minister Marco Minniti have granted citizenshi­p to little Alfie. The Italian government hopes that being Italian will allow the immediate transfer of the child to Italy,” said a statement from the Foreign Affairs Ministry.

On Monday, the director of Bambino Gesu, Mariella Enoc, and an anaestheti­st went to the Alder Hey hospital where Alfie is being treated in Liverpool, northwest England, but the establishm­ent’s management did not want to meet with them, Italian agency AGI reported.

The case has drawn the support of Pope Francis who has on two occasions called for the toddler’s life to be prolonged.

But last week, Alfie’s parents lost a last-ditch legal bid in the UK to keep their son alive. Tom Evans and Kate James had made an applicatio­n to the Supreme Court to have the case re-examined after exhausting all other legal appeals for Alfie. —

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