Pope says ‘deeply moved’ by death of British toddler

(FILES) In this file photo of April 05, 2018 a handout picture released by Action4Alfie operating the facebook group alfiesarmy and the Save Alfie Evans website on April 5, 2018 shows seriously ill British toddler Alfie Evans at Alder Hey Children's Hospital in Liverpool. The parents of terminally ill British boy Alfie Evans were to appeal on April 25, 2018, a decision preventing them from going to Rome for treatment following high-profile interventions in the case from Pope Francis and the Italian government. Toddler Evans, who suffers from a rare neurological disease, had his ventilator support removed late on April 23, but has continued breathing independently for more than a day. / AFP PHOTO / Action4Alfie / Action4Alfie / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / ACTION4ALFIE " - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - RESTRICTED TO SUBSCRIPTION USE - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS ACTION4ALFIE/AFP/Getty Images

Pope Francis said Saturday he was “deeply moved” by the news that terminally-ill British toddler Alfie Evans had died after his parents lost a legal battle to seek medical help in Italy.

“I am deeply moved by the death of little Alfie. Today I pray especially for his parents, as God the Father receives him in his tender embrace,” the pontiff wrote on his Twitter account.

Evans died on Saturday after doctors withdrew life support.

The parents had fought to take their son, who had a degenerative condition that caused irreversible brain damage, out of a hospital in Liverpool in northwest England to a clinic in Rome but lost a final court appeal on Wednesday.

Doctors had already removed life support on Monday after the parents lost a previous appeal to keep him alive.

Pope Francis intervened several times in the case that touched hearts around the world and prompted vigils in Italy and Poland.

Earlier this week the pontiff wrote on Twitter that he hoped the parents’ “desire to seek new forms of treatment may be granted”.

“The only master of life, from the beginning to its natural end, is God, and our duty is to do everything to protect life,” he said.

Thomas Evans had also met with the pope in the Vatican last week and asked him to “save our son”.

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