Charlie Gard's parents have decided to end their legal fight over the treatment of their terminally ill child. The months-long, emotionally charged case sparked a bioethical debate about end-of-life issues and captured the attention of world leaders, including Pope Francis and President Trump.

Attorney Grant Armstrong said the boy's parents, Chris Gard and Connie Yates, are withdrawing their appeal of court orders that say Charlie's treatment should end, according to the Associated Press.

Yates and Gard cried in court as their attorney said time had run out for their 11-month-old, after a U.S. doctor said it was too late to give the baby an experimental treatment on which the couple had pinned their hopes.

Britain's High Court had been scheduled to consider new evidence in the case during a two-day hearing.

Charlie has mitochondrial DNA depletion syndrome, a rare genetic condition that has robbed him of the ability to see, hear, move or breathe on his own.

He’s being treated at London's Great Ormond Street Hospital, alive only because a machine is helping him breathe. His doctors have concluded that nothing more can be done for him and that he should be taken off life support.

But his parents had been engaged in a court battle to have him undergo the experimental treatment in the United States, in the hope that it could help. They'd raised nearly $1.7 million to transport the boy to the United States if the court approved.


This is an undated photo of Charlie Gard provided by his family, taken at Great Ormond Street Hospital in London. (Family of Charlie Gard via AP)

Other courts had sided with Charlie’s doctors, who said the experimental treatment was a fruitless endeavor that has not been tested on someone with Charlie’s specific condition and would cause the baby more pain.

But Charlie’s parents had garnered support from Trump, Francis and U.S. lawmakers.

Donald J. Trump @realDonaldTrump

If we can help little , as per our friends in the U.K. and the Pope, we would be delighted to do so.

10:00 AM - 3 Jul 2017

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Pope Francis @Pontifex

To defend human life, above all when it is wounded by illness, is a duty of love that God entrusts to all.

2:32 PM - 30 Jun 2017

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Protesters who wanted Charlie to receive the experimental treatment rallied outside the courthouse on Sunday, according to the Associated Press, including some who came from as far as the United States. Others have sent death threats to the hospital treating him.

“In recent weeks the community has been...read more at Washington Post