Tag: nonuplets

  • Malian breaks world record after giving birth to 9 babies at once

    Malian breaks world record after giving birth to 9 babies at once

    A young mother has achieved a groundbreaking feat by shattering the Guinness World Record for giving birth to a staggering nine healthy babies simultaneously.

    Halima Cissé, a Malian mother and her husband, Abdelkader Arby, welcomed the nonuplets on May 4, 2021.

    The Guinness World Record says that doctors initially thought Halima would deliver seven babies, but two more babies were detected when she was flown to Ain Borja Clinic in Morocco for specialist care.

    The nonuplets were delivered prematurely through a caesarean section in the 30th week of Halima’s pregnancy.

    The babies comprise five girls and four boys, and their names are Adama, Oumou, Hawa, Kadidia, Fatouma, Oumar, Elhadji, Bah, and Mohammed VI.

    The BBC reports that the children and their mother have returned to Mali after their stay in Morocco.

    Their father said:

    They all have different characters. Some are quiet, while others make more noise and cry a lot. Some want to be picked up all the time. They are all very different, which is entirely normal.

    The Malian government contributed to the mother’s care and ordered that she be flown to Morocco when she was pregnant.

    The father, Abdelkader Arby, has said that caring for the children is a lot of work.

    It’s a lot of work but Allah, who gave us this blessing, will help us in their upbringing and taking care of them, he said.

    The parents already had a three-year-old girl before the nonuplets were born.

    The birth of the nonuplets has captured the attention of people around the world, with many expressing their amazement at the mother’s ability to carry and deliver nine babies at once.

    The Guinness World Record has confirmed that Halima Cissé’s delivery of nonuplets is the first known instance of a woman giving birth to nine babies at once.

  • Record-breaking nonuplets in Mali celebrate their second birthday

    Record-breaking nonuplets in Mali celebrate their second birthday

    The nonuplets Fatouma, Kadidia, Hawa, Adama, Oumou, Bah, Mohammed, Oumar, and Elhadji, who two years ago broke the Guinness World Record for the most live births at once, celebrated their birthdays at home in Mali on Saturday as they clock 2.

    Relatives, friends and even the paediatrician of the nonuplets attended the celebration.

    The children chose “Miraculous” as the theme of their second birthday, “it’s their favourite” said their mother, Hailma Cisse.

    A poster featuring a picture from the cartoon “Miraculous” and the name of the children welcomed guests to the party inside the family’s house, as well as decorative little boxes with pictures of the different characters.

    “I thank God for allowing me to celebrate my children’s two-year birthdays at home, in Mali,” said 27-year-old Cisse.

    Cisse was expecting seven babies, and due to the complexity and special care needed for that exceptional multiple pregnancy, the doctors in Mali – under government orders – decided to transfer her to a clinic in Casablanca, Morocco, where on May 5th 2021 the young mother gave birth to nine instead of seven kids: five girls and four boys.

    On Saturday, it seemed impossible to keep the nine sisters and brothers together for a family picture, someone was always missing, even during the cutting of the cake.

    Cisse and her husband Abdel Kader Arby, already had a 4-year-old daughter, and never thought the family was going to change so much and so quickly.

    “Usually, the organisation of the birthday is for only one child, but in this case, we end up with nine children,” said Arby with a smile.

    The parents of the nonuplets receive aid from their families, from the Malian government and from an NGO to provide food, education and general care of the kids.

  • World’s only Malian nonuplets return to their home country

    The world’s only nonuplets—nine infants born simultaneously—have safely returned to Mali, where they were born.

    In the wee hours of Tuesday, the parents and their nine infants arrived at the airport in the capital, Bamako, where Health Minister Diéminatou Sangaré met them.

    Since leaving the Ain Borja clinic, where the infants were born on May 4, 2021, they had been residing in a flat with medical assistance in Casablanca, Morocco.

    They broke the Guinness World Record for the most children delivered in a single birth to survive.

    The babies – five girls and four boys – were conceived using in vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment and were delivered by C-section.