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05 November 2024

23-year old Alexandra gives birth to quintuplets

Published
By AP

A 23-year-old Czech woman has given birth to quintuplets for the first time in the Czech Republic.

Officials at Prague's Institute for the Care of Mother and Child say four boys — Deniel, Michael, Alex and Martin — and a girl — Terezka — were born by cesarean section on Sunday.

Zbynek Stranak, chief doctor at the neonatal section of the institute says the birth took place "without any complications."

Stranak says that Alexandra Kinova and her five babies have been placed at an intensive care unit. He says the babies who were naturally conceived have a 95-percent chance to grow up healthy.

The father was present at the birth.

Kinova who is from Milovice, a town located northeast of Prague, already had a son.


(Photo YouTube)


(Photo YouTube)


(Photo YouTube)


(Photo YouTube)

Alexandra Kinova, the 23-year-old from Czech Republic has defied odds of 50 million to one to conceive the five babies without using IVF.

According to media reports, when the babies are delivered on Sunday by caesarean section, they will become Czech Republic’s first set of quins.


(Photo YouTube)


(Photo YouTube)


Twenty three-year-old Alexandra Kinova from Milovice, about 30 km east of Prague, smiles as she waits for the delivery of quintuplets at Prague's maternity hospital in Podoli Wednesday, May 29, 2013. The babies are expected to be born by Caesarean operation on Sunday. (AP)


Alexandra Kinova from Milovice (AP)

Miracle baby was rescued from pipe

Firefighters and doctors rescued an abandoned newborn baby boy by cutting away a sewage pipe piece by piece. The newborn baby boy was rescued from a sewage pipe in a Chinese apartment building after being flushed down a toilet, state media said, provoking online outrage.


A rescue worker reaching into a pipe after a newborn baby boy got stuck inside in the city of Jinhua. (AFP)


Rescue workers sawing away at a pipe to remove a newborn. (AFP)


Rescue workers cut away the section of a sewage pipe where a newborn baby. (AP)


A firefighter removes a section of a sewage pipe where a newborn baby. (AP)


Firefighters and doctors rescue an abandoned newborn baby boy by cutting away a sewage pipe piece by piece. (REUTERS)


An abandoned newborn baby boy sleeps after being rescued from a sewage pipe at a hospital in Jinhua. (REUTERS)

Mother of baby trapped in sewer raised alarm but kept quiet about her identity during rescue

The mother of the Chinese newborn trapped in a sewer pipe in a stunning ordeal caught on video had raised the initial alarm and was present for the entire two-hour rescue but did not admit giving birth until confronted by police, reports said Wednesday.

The state-run, Hangzhou-based newspaper Dushikuaibao said police became suspicious when they found baby toys and blood-stained toilet paper in the 22-year-old woman's rented room, in the building where Saturday's rescue occurred in eastern China.

The woman, whose name was not revealed in state media reports, confessed to police when they asked her to undergo a medical checkup.

The woman told police she could not afford an abortion and secretly delivered the child Saturday afternoon in the toilet. She said she tried to catch the baby but he slipped into the sewer line and that she alerted her landlord of the trapped baby after she could not pull the child out, the state-run, Jinhua-based Zhezhong News said.

Video of the rescue of Baby No. 59 — so named because of his incubator number in the hospital — was shown on Chinese news programs and websites starting late Monday and picked up worldwide, prompting both horror and an outpouring of charity on behalf of the newborn. The mother's reported confession raises questions about whether she intended to abandon the baby, while suggesting that she was desperate and did not know what to do.

Zhezhong News said the woman is a high school graduate who works at a restaurant in the Zhejiang province city of Jinhua. She said she became pregnant after a one-night stand with a man who later denied any responsibility. The woman did not reveal the pregnancy to her parents. She also said she wanted to raise the child but had no idea how to do it, according to local reports.

Firefighters were called to the residential building in the Pujiang area of Jinhua to rescue the baby, which was trapped in the L-joint of a sewage pipe just below a squat toilet in one of the building's public restrooms.

In the video, officials were shown removing the pipe from a ceiling that apparently was just below the restroom and then, at the hospital, using pliers and saws to gently pull apart the pipe, which was about 10 centimeters (about 3 inches) in diameter.

The baby, who weighed 2.8 kilograms (6 pounds, 2.8 ounces), had a low heart rate and some minor abrasions on his head and limbs, but was mostly unhurt, according to local reports. The placenta was still attached.

News of the baby's ordeal was met with horror and pity by bloggers on Chinese sites. Most speculated that the child had been dumped by his parents down the toilet. The rescue prompted an outpouring from strangers who came to the hospital with diapers, baby clothes, powdered milk and offers to adopt him.

Dushikuaibao said the mother was present throughout the entire rescue and expressed her concern for the child, thought that didn't initially rouse suspicion of the police.

Police initially said they were treating the case of as possible attempted homicide, but it was not immediately clear whether the mother would face criminal charges.

Local police refused to comment, saying the case is under further investigation.

In China, unwanted pregnancies have been on the rise because of a lack of sex education and an increasingly lax attitude toward sex. Young men and women often are engaged in unprotected sex, and abortions have become increasingly common, with abortion services widely available.

Sociologist Li Yinhe said more than 70 percent of China's young adults have had premarital sex, but that Chinese schools typically shy away from sex education and teaching about contraception because teachers don't want to appear to condone premarital sex.

"The public also is very ambiguous over whether you are committing a murder when you kill an infant or abandon it," Li said.

The landlord of the building told local media earlier in the week that there were no signs that the birth took place in the restroom and she had not been aware of any recent pregnancies among her tenants.

The baby's mother told police she cleaned up the scene in the toilet after the delivery and that she had managed to hide her pregnancy by wearing loose clothes and tightly wrapping her abdomen, Zhezhong News said.