OT/MISC Malian woman Halima Cisse expecting 7 babies gives birth to 9

TerriHaute

Hoosier Gardener
Malian woman Halima Cisse expecting 7 babies gives birth to 9
By Hannah Sparks
May 5, 2021 | 11:32am | Updated

Happy Mother’s Day — times nine!

A 25-year-old mother who was expecting to give birth to an already jaw-dropping seven babies was shocked to find two more babies tucked in her womb during labor — making her one of the few women in history to birth nonuplets. Halima Cisse’s pregnancy was extremely rare. There are only two other incidents of nonuplets since 1971. Halima Cisse, from Timbuktu, was told by doctors in Mali’s capital, Bamako, that she’d be having seven babies. A second opinion from doctors in Morocco confirmed the shocking news.

Cisse’s pregnancy had already made national headlines before she went into labor. So invested were Malians that the nation’s president, Bah N’Daw, ordered that Cisse be sent to North Africa in late March to be able to give birth with specialists present.

She was admitted to a Moroccan clinic on March 20 and remained on bedrest until giving birth on Tuesday.
And that she did — to a whopping five boys and four girls — via cesarean section, according to Mali’s health ministry.
“The mother and babies are doing well so far,” health minister Fanta Siby told Agence France-Presse, as reported in the Guardian. Siby said they confirmed the news with Cisse’s resident doctor, who had accompanied the mom-to-be to Morocco, and added that the family is currently resting there with plans to return to Mali after thorough observation.

The birth is already being hailed as a miracle as doctors have estimated that each fetus faced more than 50% odds of being stillborn, according to Mali 24, via Daily Mail. Nonuplets are exceedingly rare, with only three incidents recorded since 1971, including Cisse’s pregnancy. If the little ones pull through, the Malian mom would break the current world record now held by so-called “Octomom” Nadya Suleman, whose birth of eight in 2009 was the first and largest newborn set in the world to survive past one week — all of whom are still here today. That benchmark was previously set by the Chukwu octuplets in 1998, of which seven survived. Cisse was flown to Morocco to make sure the babies were delivered safely after the pregnancy attracted the attention of the West African nation’s leaders.

It is unclear whether in-vitro fertilization (IVF) was involved in Cisse’s pregnancy, as it is more common to give birth to multiples with the treatment. Minister Siby also gave her regards to health-care workers in Mali and Morocco, “whose professionalism is at the origin of the happy outcome of this pregnancy.”

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anna43

Veteran Member
I hope she has a lot of help because she's going to need it. Caring for two babies at a time (foster) was exhausting and I had dh and teenaged dd to help.

If all the children survive and none suffer from handicaps it will truly be a miracle.
 

vestige

Deceased
Not impossible.
North Africa has isolated mountain and Bedouin remnant populations with Caucasian features, acc. to Robert Sepher. I don't know the percentages. North Africa used to be Hellenic.
I would say it is closer to impossible than possible.
 
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