Parents of a record-breaking nine babies are said to be ‘absolutely delighted’ to finally return home after 19 months spent living around an intensive care clinic.
Mother Halima Cissé, 27, and her husband Abdelkader Arby, 36, from Mali were on Tuesday preparing to meet family and friends in the country’s capital Bamako, and they will then head on to Timbuktu.
It follows almost two years at the specialist Ain Borja clinic in Casablanca, Morocco, following the birth of their nonuplets in May 2021.
‘It’s been a long wait, with plenty of tears, but the babies are now all fighting fit, and everybody is delighted to be coming home,’ a close family friend in Mali told Mail Online.
Parents of a record-breaking nine babies are said to be ‘absolutely delighted’ to finally return home after 19 months spent living around an intensive care clinic
A family member holding one of the nine babies who have just left intensive car after almost two years
Another picture of a relative holding one of the nonuplets who was born in May 2021
‘They are getting lots of support from the Malian government and – God Willing – are now going to enjoy a lovely new home in Timbuktu.
‘It has been specially designed for a very big family and is equipped with everything they need.
‘The kids have been getting stronger every day, and really get on well with each other – they are very cute indeed.
‘There was lots of emotion when they left the clinic in Casablanca – they viewed the staff there as family – but going home as soon as possible was always the plan.’
After two years the nonuplets (pictured) left the specialist Ain Borja clinic in Casablanca, Morocco, fafter almost two years
A family member said the nonpuplets, including the one pictured here, are getting stronger every day
Halima Cisse, 26, (left) is pictured for the first time with her husband Kader Arby, 35, (right) and their nine babies in Morocco
The five girls and four boys now have the Guinness World Record for the most children to survive a single delivery, and will be joining their older sister, Soda, four – making 10 kids in all.
The nonuplets were delivered prematurely by Caesarean-Section surgery and beat a previous record set by American ‘Octomum’ Nadya Suleman, who had eight babies in 2009.
Kadidia, Oumou, Adama, Fatouma, and Hawa are the girls, while the boys are Mohammed VI, Bah, Elhadji and Oumar.
Mohammed is named after the King of Morocco, as a tribute to the North African kingdom where they were delivered so successfully.
The children weighed between just 500g and 1kg at birth, said Professor Youssef Alaoui, director of the Ain Borja clinic.
Mother Halima Cissé, 27 (right), and her husband Abdelkader Arby (left), 36, from Mali were on Tuesday preparing to meet family and friends in the country’s capital Bamako, and they will then head on to Timbuktu.
Amongst the record breaking nonuplets, are five little girls that Ms Cisse has dressed in pink and grey and all blue babygrows
The family originally moved to an apartment nearby, so that staff could offer them around-the-clock care.
Speaking earlier this year, dad Abdelkader, a Malian Army officer, said: ‘They all have very 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.
‘They’re all crawling now. Some are sitting up and can even walk if they hold on to something.’
In the brood of nine babies, there were four boys, all pictured together here in camouflage babygrows at the hospital
The baby girls left to right are: Adama, Oumou, Hawa, Kadidia, and Fatouma. The boys are Oumar, Elhadji, Bah, Mohammed VI
Abdelkader said the children were already ‘hugely popular’ in Mali, and Malians were ‘very keen to see the babies with their own eyes’.
Mother Halima almost died of blood loss during the C-surgery but is now recovered fully, and getting through around 100 nappies a day.
She told the MailOnline: ‘As the babies were coming out, there were so many questions going through my mind.
‘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.’
After a tough start to life, all born prematurely in May and having to be kept under close observation, they have all put on weight and are set to leave intensivecare after almost two years
Halima was initially too exhausted to look after the kids, and ran out of breast milk, instead visiting them once a day for 30 minutes so as to forge a bond with the tots.
Abdelkader added: ‘The Malian state has put everything in place for the care and treatment of the nine babies and their mother. It’s not at all easy, but it’s beautiful and something that is comforting.
‘ I hope God blesses everyone who doesn’t yet have children – that they can have what we, the parents of nonuplets currently have. It’s beautiful, a real treasure.’