Twin girls who are joined at the head have been born to a family in Indonesia. Hopefully, they may soon be separated in a life-changing operation.
The sisters, Nadira Alifa Putri and Nadiba Aisyah Putri, have been conjoined since their birth four months ago, sharing a skull but not a brain.
They were born on January 21 as triplets, delivered by Caesarean section at the Tanjungpinang Regional General Hospital in Indonesia, but their other sister is separate to them. See the three triplets below...
Parents Siti Nuryaningsih and Juarnes Prana Dinata, both 30, are now waiting for a landmark operation which will separate their daughters, allowing them to lead a normal life.
DailyMail reports Mr Dinata said:
Their mother says they may share a skull, but they have completely separate characters.
She said:
The twins have been referred to the Cipto Mangunkusumo Hospital in Jakarta. But doctors at the hospital have asked the parents to wait until the babies gain weight to perform the the operation to split them up.
But Mr Dinata is desperate for his girls to be separated sooner. He said:
Conjoined twins occur about once in every 200,000 live births and their survival is 'anything but assured' according to the University of Maryland Medical Centre.



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