London (AFP) - A London hospital on Saturday was due to withdraw life support for 12-year-old British boy Archie Battersbee after his parents lost a long and emotive legal battle.
Archie's mother, Hollie Dance, found her son unconscious at home in April with signs he had placed a cord around his neck, possibly after taking part in an online asphyxiation challenge.
"It's been really hard," Dance told Sky News late Friday, breaking down in tears, before the family spent the night at Archie's bedside in the Royal London Hospital.
"Despite the hard, strong face and appearance obviously in front of the cameras up until now, I've been pretty broken," she said.
Life support was to be withdrawn at 10:00 am (0900 GMT), Dance said, although there was no word from the hospital an hour later.
At the entrance to the hospital in east London, well-wishers left flowers and cards, and lit candles in the shape of the letter "A".
"My boy is 12, the same age as Archie, and this just puts things in perspective," Shelley Elias, 43, said after leaving her own offerings at the impromptu vigil.
"I did not know what to write because there are no words that will take the pain away," she said.
A judge in June agreed with doctors that Archie was "brain-stem dead", allowing life support to be discontinued, but the family fought through the courts to overturn that.
Arguing that Archie could benefit from treatment in Italy or Japan, they took their case all the way to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, which this week declined to intervene.
The parents also lost a last-ditch legal bid to have Archie transferred to a hospice for his final hours.
"All legal routes have been exhausted," a spokesman for the campaign group Christian Concern, which has been supporting the family, said late Friday.
"The family are devastated and are spending precious time with Archie."
'Charlie's Law'
The case is the latest in a series that have pitted parents against Britain's legal and healthcare systems.
The involvement of groups such as Christian Concern in support of desperate parents has drawn criticism for prolonging the pain of all concerned.
After a highly charged battle between the hospital and his parents, 23-month-old Alfie Evans died in April 2018 when doctors in Liverpool, in northwestern England, withdrew life support.
His parents had the support of Pope Francis to take him to a clinic in Rome, but lost a final court appeal days before he died.
Charlie Gard, born in August 2016 with a rare form of mitochondrial disease that causes progressive muscle weakness, died one week short of his first birthday after doctors withdrew life support.
His parents had fought a five-month legal battle for Charlie to be taken to the United States for experimental treatment.
They have since been pushing the UK government to adopt "Charlie's Law", proposed legislation that would strengthen parents' rights when disputes arise over the treatment of their children.
"The whole system has been stacked against us," Archie's mother Dance said.
"Reform must now come through Charlie's Law so that no parents have to go through this."