MillenniumPost
Nation

Bihar’s conjoined twins happy over SC ruling

Seventeen-year-old conjoined twins Saba and Farah welcomed the Supreme Court ruling on Wednesday that did away with the option of a surgery to separate them and directed the state government to grant the family Rs.5,000 per month.

‘We are very happy and excited, and thank the Supreme Court for its decision to rule out the surgical possibility to separate us. The court's verdict will provide us time to live together, like we have since birth,’ Saba, lying on a bed with Farah, at their  Samanpur residence in the city, said.

Farah said: ‘We are grateful, from the core of our heart. We are also thankful to Allah for it,’ she said.

The court has directed the state government to ensure that the twins get the best medical attention, and said the Patna district civil surgeon must ensure regular check-ups for the conjoined sisters.

The father of the girls, Shakeel Ahmad, said: ‘The court order has given us fresh hope.’ Ahmad, who runs a small roadside eatery here, said only the government could help the family.

Ahmad recalled that a few years ago, one of the rulers of a Gulf country had promised to the bear the costs of surgically separating the two sisters. ‘After initial consultations at Delhi's Apollo Hospital, everything was forgotten,’ he said.

American neurosurgeon Benjamin Carson had travelled to India to study the twins. He had agreed to perform the risky operation, with assistance from Indian doctors. Carson had warned that surgery would be risky, and only one the girls might survive.   
Next Story
Share it