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Brett King, father of Ashya King, speaks to the media as he arrives with his wife Naghemeh (not pictured) at Malaga's Materno-Infantil Hospital, where their son is hospitalized since last Saturday, in Malaga, southern Spain, September 3, 2014.JON NAZCA/Reuters

The British parents who were pursued by police for taking their critically ill son out of a UK hospital for treatment abroad reunited with the child Wednesday after they were released from a Spanish prison.

A hospital spokeswoman said Brett and Naghmeh King visited their 5-year-old son Ashya at the Children's and Maternity Hospital in Malaga, but local authorities had received notification from British officials that the parents should not be allowed to take the boy away.

A British judge has made the child a ward of court, said the spokeswoman, who spoke on condition of anonymity because hospital rules bar her from being named.

The parents were sought by police on child cruelty charges after they took Ashya, who has been treated for a brain tumour, out of a British hospital against doctors' advice. They then travelled to Spain where they planned to sell a property to pay for proton beam radiation therapy in the Czech Republic or the United States.

They were arrested on Saturday and were being held in a prison near Madrid pending a British extradition request, but were released after U.K. authorities dropped the charges against them.

Their ordeal has generated a heated debate over whether authorities acted appropriately in chasing the parents through Europe.

The boy had a brain tumour removed and needs treatment to prevent it from returning.

Brett King told reporters in the Spanish city of Seville earlier Wednesday that everything he and his wife did for their son was for the boy's own good.

"We just want to help our son get through this bad time, because he hasn't got too many months to live," King said.

The British doctors have previously said Ashya's chances of survival were between 70 per cent and 80 per cent with standard radiotherapy.

King criticized his son's medical care in southern England at Southampton General Hospital, saying "they were going to kill him in England or turn him into a vegetable."

He did not say what his immediate treatment plans are for the child.

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