Alfie is Italian after the Council of Ministers but does not move from Great Britain

(by Denise Faticante - LaPresse) - No Italy. The fate of little Alfie, the English child suffering from an unknown degenerative neurological disease, hospitalized at the Alder Hey children's hospital in Liverpool and at the center of a bitter legal battle, has been decided but our country will not be involved in any way. British High Court Judge Anthony Hayden confirmed that Evans will not be transferred to Italy, where his parents asked him to be taken. Yet the Child Jesus, a Roman hospital of the Holy See that had offered to treat him, was ready. “We are ready, the plane is in Ciampino with the doctors on board. The Italian embassy in England is also looking for an ambulance for transport from the hospital to the airport. The plane, I repeat, is in Ciampino ready to take off. The doctors and the equipment are there. The team is ready ”, insists the president Mariella Enoc. To welcome the 23-month-old child suffering from epileptogenic encephalopathy or neurodegenerative disease of the progressive myoclonic epilepsies group, medicine, politics and Pope Francis have moved. Alfie Evans is in fact an Italian citizen: this was decided by the Council of Ministers "in consideration of the exceptional interest for the national community in ensuring the minor further therapeutic developments, in the protection of pre-eminent humanitarian values ​​which, in this case, concern the safeguarding of health. ”From right to left, politics spared no words towards the child. The League has presented a motion to bring him to Italy, the president of the European Parliament Tajani asks to "stop the ideologies that want to determine death". Catholic doctors also take the field for whom "it is inhumane to detach the child from the arms of the parents." vast solidarity in favor of little Alfie Evans, I renew my appeal for the suffering of his parents to be heard and their desire to try new treatment options granted ". Strong tones were also used by the president of the National Institute of Health, Walter Ricciardi. “There are many more humane ways to handle this situation - he underlines. The way used by the English colleagues, in this circumstance, is shocking and inhumane. Very often the decisions of the English colleagues are very rigid and linked to economic-managerial criteria ". The little one was denied by the British justice the possibility of being kept alive to the bitter end. Today's decision shuffles the cards: but the game will continue to be played outside Italy.

Alfie is Italian after the Council of Ministers but does not move from Great Britain

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