Halima Cisse, 26, got pregnant in a natural way and gave birth to nine children on May 5, 2021, in the Ain Borja clinic in Casablanca, Morocco. Halima was born in the Republic of Mali. She married her spouse, Kader Arby, in 2017, and they had a daughter. The lady, who broke a new record in Monaco by having nine children, said that her kids eat 6 liters of milk every day and she changes 100 diapers each day.

Halima came for an ultrasound after learning she was pregnant for the second time. She was taken aback when the doctor informed her that she was having seven children. She had a tough pregnancy since her pregnant tummy weighed more than 30 kg. With the help of Mali’s President, Bah N’Daw, Halima was moved to a hospital in Morocco with better medical equipment.

When it came time to give birth, the experts, and especially the mom, were surprised to discover that the children were not 7, but 9. Two of the babies had apparently blended in with the siblings at the time of the ultrasound. For 20 minutes, 10 physicians and 25 medical personnel worked together to deliver these 9 infants. The nine kids, four boys and five girls, were born weighing 500 grams to one kilogram and were called Kadidia, Mohammed VI, Fatouma, Oumar, Hawa, Adama, Bah, Oumou, and El Hadji.

Due to the travel restrictions, her husband, Kader Arby, 35, was permitted to visit his wife and their children in Morocco on July 19. “It’s just incredible and indescribable.” “I can only thank God for saving my wife and children,” said Kader, a Mali naval sailor.

Kader confessed that providing for his children in the future would be financially difficult. His family presently resides in a three-bedroom home, which he intends to extend to accommodate ten children. “There will be a lot of work to do, but for now, we’re just focused on taking care of the kids and getting them home.” “What concerns me the most is not the number of rooms or the amount of money in the home, but how it will benefit his wife and children,” Kader remarked.

He went on to say that the family is profoundly affected by the assistance they have gotten. Many individuals have phoned, and those who have reached him have expressed their delight. Because it was a unique delivery, the Malian government paid the cost of caring for nine newborns, which totaled more than $1.5 million.