Family of boy thrown from Tate Modern say he’s taken a ‘sad step backwards’

File photo dated 4/8/2019 of emergency crews attending a scene at the Tate Modern art gallery following an incident where a child fell. A teenager has been charged with attempted murder after a six-year-old boy was allegedly thrown from a viewing platform at the art gallery. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Tuesday August 6, 2019. The 17-year-old is due to appear at Bromley Youth Court on Tuesday accused of trying to kill the child, who is a French national visiting London with his family. See PA story POLICE Tate. Photo credit should read: Yui Mok/PA Wire
Emergency crews at the scene as the boy was being treated in 2019 (Picture: PA)

The boy who was thrown off the balcony of the Tate Modern art gallery has made a ‘sad backwards step’ in his recovery.

The boy, from France, was six-years-old when he was thrown from the 10th floor by Jonty Bravery in August 2019.

He survived the fall but suffered a bleed on the brain and multiple broken bones.

His family, who refer to him as ‘notre petit chevalier’ or ‘our little knight’ posted in hs GoFundMe last night that his rehabilitation has undergone a ‘sad step backward’ following an operation in January.

They wrote: ‘He is still hospitalised in a rehabilitation centre because he is still unable to walk.

‘He has only been able to have weekend leave for the past three weeks, in a wheelchair, which frustrates him greatly: it feels like a sad step backwards.

A handout photograph released by the Metropolitan Police on December 6, 2019 shows Jonty Bravery posing for his custody photograph in London. - British teenager Jonty Bravery on December 6, 2019 pleaded guilty to the attempted murder of a six-year-old French boy, who was thrown from the 10th floor viewing platform of London's Tate Modern art gallery. (Photo by Handout / METROPOLITAN POLICE / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / METROPOLITAN POLICE " - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS (Photo by HANDOUT/METROPOLITAN POLICE/AFP via Getty Images)
Jonty Bravery was handed a life sentence for the attack (Picture: AFP)

‘He is eager to be able to walk again and resume a normal life outside the rehabilitation centre, even if this normal life means spending half his time in treatment and only the other half at school.

‘Our little knight, as courageous as ever, continues to fight and train, and we will remain by his side to support him no matter what.’

In October the family said the boy had achieved his ‘long set’ goal of being able to run,jump and swim again.

The family had also found a school which was ‘perfectly suited to his needs’.

They said: ‘In a very short time, he made new friends who have stayed in touch despite his extended absence.

‘They encourage him and eagerly await his return. It’s a warm welcome he hasn’t received at school in a long time.’

Jonty Bravery was handed a life sentence for throwing the boy 100 ft from the 10th floor of the gallery.

The judge said it is ‘very unlikely’ Bravery will be deemed safe for release at the end of his 15-year minimum term, ‘unless something significant changes’.

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