![]() ![]() ![]() She added: ‘My sister was holding my hand but all I could think about was how would I look after them and who was going to help me?’ I was very aware of what was going on and it seemed as if there was an endless stream of babies coming out of me. Halima gave birth by Caesarean section, accompanied by her sister, Aisha, while her husband initially stayed behind at their home in Timbuktu, Mali.ĭescribing the birth, Halima said: ‘As the babies were coming out, there were so many questions going through my mind. ![]() I’m grateful to the medical team that are doing all the hard work and the Government of Mali for funding this.’ ‘It’s astonishing the amount of work that is involved in looking after them. ‘Giving birth to one child is hard enough but having nine is unimaginable,’ said Halima. We revealed in July how Halima was getting through a staggering 100 nappies per day and six litres of milk - but that she was too tired to look after them and spent most of her days sleeping and watching television. They were taken off incubators in early August since when the family have been living together in flat close to the hospital so the medical staff can continue to monitor them. The exhausted parents say their babies are a 'joy' to look after Ms Cisse's nine tots, who were conceived naturally, each weighed between 500gm to 1kg when they were born and had to remain in incubators in the clinic's intensive care unit where they were looked after round the clock by a team of doctors and nurses for the first few months of their lives.īut now all nine have gained weight and continued to thrive meaning they can soon go back to their home country, Mali. They are getting stronger every day and it may well be they are allowed to leave full time medical care soon, so that we can take them home.’ Speaking exclusively to MailOnline, Ms Cisse, 26, said: 'All of them are getting on very well, and are a joy to look after. Halima Cisse beams proudly with her nonuplets, five months after she made headlines around the globe when she gave birth at the Ain Borja clinic in Casablanca, Morocco, breaking the previous world record set by 'Octomum' Nadya Suleman in 2009, who gave birth to eight babies that survived. Pictured all together for the first time, this is the world record-breaking NINE miracle babies born to the same mother - as the healthy brood prepare to go home. The four boys are called Mohammed, Bah, El Hadji and Oumar while the five girls are named Hawa, Adama, Fatouma, Oumou and Kadidiaīy Nabila Ramdani And Peter Allen For Mailonline.Her husband Kader Arby, 35, a sailor with the Mali navy, had to stay behind at their three-bedroom home in Timbuktu due to Covid restrictions and could only meet the babies for the first time in Morocco on July 9.They are getting stronger every day and it may well be they are allowed to leave medical care soon' Speaking from hospital in Morocco, the 26-year-old said: 'All of them are getting on very well, and are a joy to look after.Now, five months on Ms Cisse says the babies who were born prematurely are getting bigger and healthier and are almost ready to go home to Mali.Halima Cisse gave birth to nine babies at the Ain Borja clinic in Casablanca, Morocco on May 5, breaking the current world record set by Nadya Suleman in 2009, who gave birth to eight babies that survived.as mum reveals the nonuplets are almost ready to fly home to Mali EXCLUSIVE: Pictured all together for the first time, the proud (but exhausted) parents to a world record-breaking miracle NINE babies. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |