Yemen conjoined twins ‘like any child’ after separation in Jordan

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Members of a Jordanian medical team made the announcement during a press conference in Amman on Oct. 3, 2021. In the background, a screen shows the operation room during the surgery. (AFP)
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Members of a Jordanian medical team made the announcement during a press conference in Amman on Oct. 3, 2021. In the background, a screen shows the twins before their separation. (AFP)
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Updated 03 October 2021
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Yemen conjoined twins ‘like any child’ after separation in Jordan

  • The twins were born in Yemen and flown to Amman in February this year to undergo surgery.
  • The rare eight-hour operation took place on July 3 of the same year

AMMAN: A Jordanian hospital has successfully performed the country’s first operation to separate conjoined twins, seven-month-old babies from Yemen, the chief surgeon announced Sunday.
It was “a rare and delicate” procedure which is “a medical success for the whole kingdom,” said the doctor, Fawzi Al-Hammouri.
The nearly eight-hour operation which required 25 surgeons and technical advisers was performed in July.
But Amman’s Specialized Hospital delayed any announcement because “after the operation they (the babies) needed intensive care, artificial respiration and intravenous feeding for a long time,” he said.
“We wanted to wait until we were sure 100 percent that things went smoothly.”
Now the twins, Ahmed and Mohammed, are in “excellent health,” Hammouri told AFP.
“The chances of their survival are very great. They have become like any normal child. The danger has disappeared,” he said.




Members of a Jordanian medical team made the announcement during a press conference in Amman on Oct. 3, 2021. In the background, a screen shows the twins before their separation. (AFP)

A United Nations medical flight had brought the babies and their parents to Jordan in February.
Born in mid-December in Yemen’s rebel-held capital Sanaa, they were in critical condition.
“When they arrived, they both weighed three kilograms and 700 grams (eight pounds). We waited until they weighed nine kilograms together” before separating them, Hammouri said.
The babies are still in Jordan with their parents but expected to return home in two or three weeks, he added.
Seven years of war between the Houthi militia and pro-government forces have devastated health services in Yemen.
About 80 percent of the country’s 30 million people, long the Arabian Peninsula’s poorest country, are dependent on aid.
In February 2019, conjoined twins died in Sanaa two weeks after their birth.
Conjoined twins develop when an early embryo only partially separates, to form two individuals who will remain physically connected, the Mayo Clinic says on its website.
Many conjoined twins are stillborn or die shortly after birth, but advances in surgery and technology have improved survival rates.


Prosecutors indict 12 Israeli suspects in Gaza smuggling case

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Prosecutors indict 12 Israeli suspects in Gaza smuggling case

  • A Justice Ministry statement said the suspects had been ‘willfully ignoring the direct contribution of this activity to the strengthening of terrorist organizations in the Strip,’ notably Hamas

JERUSALEM: Prosecutors on Wednesday filed charges against 12 Israeli suspects including reservist soldiers for offenses including “assisting the enemy in wartime,” over the alleged smuggling of prohibited goods into war-shattered Gaza.

Israel controls the entry of all goods and people into the besieged Palestinian territory, where humanitarian conditions remain dire despite a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas which came into effect on October 10.

A Justice Ministry statement said the smuggled goods were worth millions of Israeli shekels and included cartons of cigarettes, iPhones, batteries, communication cables, car parts and more.

It described the operation as a “serious case of organized, systematic, and sophisticated smuggling of various goods into the Gaza Strip for profit,” which began in the summer of 2025, when war was still raging in Gaza.

The Justice Ministry statement said charges had been filed against 12 individuals and one company.

A joint statement from the police and Israel’s Shin Bet domestic intelligence agency confirmed they had “arrested several Israeli citizens and Gaza Strip residents who smuggled goods prohibited from entering the Gaza Strip.”

It said those arrested included reservists in the Israeli military.

The statement added that the suspects had been “willfully ignoring the direct contribution of this activity to the strengthening of terrorist organizations in the Strip,” notably Hamas.

“This morning (Wednesday), the Southern District Prosecutor’s Office filed indictments against 12 of the suspects for offenses including assisting the enemy in wartime, performing actions with property for terrorist purposes, obtaining something by fraud under aggravated circumstances, bribery offenses, and economic offenses,” it added.

Israeli media reported that the brother of Israel’s Shin Bet chief, David Zini, was allegedly linked to smuggling cigarettes into Gaza.

Reports said that Bezalel Zini was expected to be indicted on Thursday.