A frantic police hunt was under way yesterday for a five-year-old boy with a brain tumor taken from a British hospital by his family, as fears for his life intensified with every passing hour.
Ashya King’s parents took him on Thursday from a hospital in Southampton, England, without doctors’ consent and boarded a ferry to the French port of Cherbourg.
It is not known why Brett King, 51, and Naghemeh King, 45, took their son. While they are Jehovah’s Witnesses, the movement said on Friday there was no indication their decision was motivated by religious convictions.
“There are serious concerns for Ashya’s health, he is immobile and likely to be in a wheelchair or buggy, and cannot communicate verbally,” Interpol said in a statement.
The missing persons alert went out to all 190 Interpol member countries, dramatically stepping up the hunt for the missing child.
Detective superintendent Dick Pearson from police in Hampshire, England, who is leading the investigation, said: “If we do not locate Ashya today, there are serious concerns for his life.”
The youngster, who has undergone extensive surgery and was last operated on a week ago, is fed through a tube on a battery-operated system.
Hampshire police assistant chief constable Chris Shead said late on Friday: “We have been told by medical experts that the battery life on the machine that administers his food is now likely to have expired. We don’t know whether the King family have any spares, the knowledge, or any way of recharging the battery. If they don’t, without properly administered food, Ashya’s condition will deteriorate very quickly. With each hour that passes our concern for him grows.”
In a statement, the hospital in Southampton said Ashya was allowed to leave the ward under his parents’ supervision and hospital staff raised the alarm when the length of his absence “became a cause of concern.”
“The information we have received from his medical team at Southampton General Hospital is that he must continue to be fed via a tube by someone with the relevant medical training,” Shead said. “If he doesn’t receive urgent medical care, or the wrong treatment is given, his condition will become life-threatening.”
Cherbourg prosecutor Eric Bouillard told reporters that authorities considered the boy had been “kidnapped given the circumstances of his departure from hospital.”
“For the moment, what we most want to do is contact the family,” he added.
Jehovah’s Witnesses are known for refusing blood transfusions on religious grounds, but they are otherwise open to other medical procedures.
The religious movement confirmed on Friday that the parents are members.
“However, we are not aware of the facts of the case nor the reasons for the family’s medical choices which are personal decisions,” it said in a statement. “There is absolutely no indication, as far as we are aware, that their decision is in any way motivated by any religious convictions, Jehovah’s Witnesses are encouraged to seek the best medical treatment for themselves and their children.”
“Our message to you is: please take Ashya to the nearest hospital immediately,” said Shead, appealing directly to the family. “We understand this must be an awful time for you but the most important thing is to get the proper medical care for Ashya. Please work with us to provide Ashya that care.”
Though they sailed to France, Shead raised the possibility that they could have reached other countries by now.
French authorities told reporters that the family arrived on Thursday night with their seven children and were driving a gray Hyundai.
The other six children are aged from three to 22 years old.
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