I begged them: the Guinean mother deported from Belarus without her baby

A Polish soldier stands next to the placard reading "Border State" at the Belarusian border in Ozierany Male, eastern Poland. (AFP)
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Updated 23 January 2026
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I begged them: the Guinean mother deported from Belarus without her baby

  • The reports drew condemnation by UN experts, rights groups and Guinean diplomats

CONAKRY: It’s been nine months since Mariam Soumah, a 23-year-old Guinean woman, says she last saw her baby girl Sabina. The mother is in Guinea, while her daughter is — against her will — in an orphanage in Belarus.
Several months ago, Belarus forcibly deported the young migrant mother to her west African homeland without her baby, according to Soumah and rights groups that have taken up her case.
The reports drew condemnation by UN experts, rights groups and Guinean diplomats.
“I begged them not to do it,” Soumah told AFP during an interview in the slums of Guinea’s capital Conakry, swiping through recent photos on her phone of Sabina — who turned one in November — wearing a red dress.
In a bid to escape poverty, Soumah said she had traveled across Africa to get to Belarus, hoping to get to the EU.
The migration route has become popular in recent years, with the EU accusing the regime of President Alexander Lukashenko of encouraging migrants to try to enter the bloc via Belarus.
Like many, Soumah was lured online to come to authoritarian Belarus on a student visa.
“I didn’t want to go (to Europe) by sea. I looked on a map and saw Belarus was surrounded by Schengen countries.”

- 600 grams -

Her ordeal began in Belarus just as she tried to renew her visa.
Having fallen pregnant there with a Guinean man who left to try to get to the EU, Soumah went into labor more than two months before her due date.
Sabina weighed just 600 grams when she was born in November 2024.
She was rushed to intensive care, where Belarusian doctors managed to save her.
But shortly afterwards, Soumah said she was restricted from seeing her child unless she paid hefty medical bills.
She was later imprisoned for breaking migration rules and forced on a plane without her daughter.
“I said I will only go back with my baby. I begged them, please, just let my baby recover and I will go home with her,” Soumah told AFP.
“They said no.”
Since her deportation in August, Soumah said she has been allowed two short video calls to see Sabina, who is being kept in a Minsk orphanage.
UN experts have called reports of the forced separation “extremely concerning.”
The Guinean embassy in Moscow, which oversees Belarus, told AFP it was following the case with “great humanitarian concern” and said it had demanded “clarifications.”
The embassy said UNICEF Belarus — which told AFP it cannot comment on individual cases — is aware and could help organize “humanitarian support” for the child.
Belarusian authorities did not respond to an AFP request for comment.

- ‘From morning to night’ -

Attempts to restrict Soumah from Sabina began while she was recovering from an emergency C-section.
“Already in hospital, I asked, ‘how is my baby?’ and they told me she was sick and tired,” Soumah said.
She only knew that Sabina had been moved to another hospital.
After 10 days, she walked through Minsk “looking from morning to night” before finding the hospital her daughter was in and visiting her daily.
After Sabina was discharged from intensive care and moved to another hospital, Soumah was handed a medical bill of around $33,000.
Upon seeing it, “I raised my hands into the air,” she said.
She was then blocked from seeing Sabina until she paid.
“I kept coming and they kept saying she was sleeping... or out with the nurses.”

- ‘What orphanage?’ -

According to Soumah, a woman in the hospital last summer announced to her that Sabina was being sent to an orphanage.
“I said: what? What orphanage?” Soumah, herself an orphan, recalled.
Simultaneously, immigration services were ramping up the pressure.
She tried to sign up for more studies for a new visa but was refused.
In July, Soumah said she was jailed for breaking immigration rules.
The exiled rights group Human Constanta — which monitors migrant rights in Belarus — slammed the heavy-handed response for what is classified an administrative, not criminal, offense.
“They simply did not care and separated the mother and child,” Enira Bronitskaya, of Human Constanta, said, calling the process “manipulative.”

- Deportation -

“Threatening her not to give her her child is, of course, illegal,” Bronitskaya said, since there was no official ruling to strip Soumah of her parental rights.
In prison, Soumah said immigration officers tried to get her to find a family member that could fund a ticket home.
Nobody could and “anyway I would not leave without my baby,” she said.
Then, one day she said she was handcuffed, driven to the airport, put on a flight to Istanbul and told not to come back.
In Turkiye, Soumah opened her phone to call the woman who raised her.
“I am coming,” she told her, sobbing.
“But I have nothing, not even my child.”


World not ready for rise in extreme heat, scientists say

A man drinks water under the sun on a beach in Puerto Madryn, Chubut province, Argentina on January 26, 2024. (AFP)
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World not ready for rise in extreme heat, scientists say

  • In a new study, they looked at different global warming scenarios to project how often people in the future might experience temperatures considered uncomfortably hot or cold

PARIS: Nearly 3.8 billion people could face extreme heat by 2050, and while tropical countries will bear the brunt, cooler regions will also need to adapt, scientists said Monday.

Demand for cooling will “drastically” increase in large countries like Brazil, Indonesia, and Nigeria, where hundreds of millions of people lack air conditioning or other means to beat the heat.

But even a moderate increase in hotter days could have a “severe impact” in nations not accustomed to such conditions, such as Canada, Russia, and Finland, said scientists from the University of Oxford.

In a new study, they looked at different global warming scenarios to project how often people in the future might experience temperatures considered uncomfortably hot or cold.

They found “that the population experiencing extreme heat conditions is projected to nearly double” by 2050 if global average temperatures rise 2°C above preindustrial times.

But most of the impact would be felt this decade as the world fast approaches the 1.5°C mark, said the study’s lead author Jesus Lizana.

“The key takeaway from this is that the need for adaptation to extreme heat is more urgent than previously known,” said Lizana, an environmental scientist.

“New infrastructure, such as sustainable air conditioning or passive cooling, needs to be built out within the next few years to ensure people can cope with dangerous heat.”

Prolonged exposure to extreme heat can overwhelm the body’s natural cooling systems, causing symptoms ranging from dizziness and headaches to organ failure and death.

It is often called a silent killer because most heat deaths occur gradually as high temperatures and other environmental factors work together to undermine the body’s internal thermostat.

Climate change is making heatwaves longer and stronger, and access to cooling — especially air conditioning — will be vital in the future.

The study, published in the journal Nature Sustainability, projected that 3.79 billion people worldwide could be exposed to extreme heat by mid century.

This would “drastically” increase energy demand for cooling in developing nations where the gravest health consequences would be felt. India, the Philippines, and Bangladesh would be among the countries with the largest populations affected.

The most significant change in “cooling degree days” — temperatures hot enough to require cooling, such as air conditioning or fans — was projected in tropical or equatorial countries, particularly in Africa.

Central African Republic, Nigeria, South Sudan, Laos, and Brazil saw the biggest rise in dangerously hot temperatures.

“Put simply, the most disadvantaged people are the ones who will bear the brunt of this trend, our study shows for ever hotter days,” said urban climate scientist and research co-author Radhika Khosla.

But wealthier countries in traditionally cooler climates also “face a major problem — even if many do not realize it yet,” she added.

Countries like Canada, Russia, and Finland may experience steep drops in “heating degree days” — temperatures low enough to require indoor heating — under a 2°C scenario.

But even a moderate rise in hotter temperatures would be felt more acutely in countries not designed to withstand heat, the authors said.

In these countries, homes and buildings are usually built to maximize sunlight and minimize ventilation, and public transport runs without air conditioning.

Some cold-climate nations may see a drop in heating bills, Lizana said, but over time these savings would likely be replaced by cooling costs, including in Europe, where air conditioning is still rare.

“Wealthier countries cannot sit back and assume they will be OK — in many cases, they are dangerously underprepared for the heat that is coming over the next few years,” he said.