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An infant girl born with two faces
three weeks ago in northern India.(Xinhua/AFP Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, April 7 (Xinhuanet)-- An Indian infant girl
born with two faces eats and breathes normally despite having two pairs of eyes
and lips and two noses, according to the baby's parents quoted by media reports
Monday.
The baby, who is yet to be named, was born to factory
worker Vinod Kumar and his wife Sushma three weeks ago in northern India.
She has drawn a stream of curious observers, with
some even considering her a deity.
"I had never seen something like this in my life so
naturally I was a little scared when I first saw her," her father was quoted as
saying.
The baby's grandfather said she "is very
special to us."
The family said it has no plans to consult
doctors to check if the girl can receive treatment or corrective surgery.
"The doctor said everything is normal when she was
born. So where's the need to get medical help?" said the child's father.
"She's fed through one mouth and sucks her thumb with
the other. We use whichever mouth is free to feed her."
The family lives in mud-and-brick house in Noida
town, about 50 km (30 miles) northeast of New Delhi.
The case comes just months after Indian doctors
performed a rare, marathon surgery to remove the extra limbs of two-year-old
girl Lakshmi Tatma born with four arms and legs.
(Agencies)
Indian girl with extra limbs leaves
intensive care
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Shambhu, unseen, carries his daughter
Lakshmi during a press conference at Sparsha Hospital in Banglore, India,
Nov. 13, 2007. Nearly a week after surgeons removed the extra limbs from
the Indian girl born with four arms and four legs, the bright-eyed
2-year-old made her first public appearance Tuesday after leaving the
hospital's intensive care unit. (Source:
chinadaily.com.cn/Agencies) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, Nov. 15 (Xinhuanet) -- Judging from her appearance -- healthy and alert
-- you would never suppose Lakshmi was only one week removed from a 24-hour
operation to remove two extra arms and legs.
Swathed in blankets and lying on her father's lap, the
bright-eyed 2-year-old Indian girl appeared before reporters without the extra
limbs that had led some in her rural village to revere her as an incarnation of
the four-armed goddess she was named after.
Lakshmi had both of her legs in casts to keep her inverted
feet straight and the legs together while her arms were free. After sitting for
photographs, her parents quickly whisked her off the stage without speaking to
reporters. Full story