Identical twins were spotted apparently jockeying for position in their mother’s womb, according to reports on April 15.
The father of the twins, identified as Mr. Tao, said he filmed the ultrasound scan, saying they were “boxing with each other for a few rounds.” It was uploaded to a social media app before it went viral.
“Whoever wins [the fight] can be the elder one when they are born,” one person joked on the social media app. Another added, “They fight in [their mother’s] belly, but will love each other when they are born.”
The Mail quoted Tao as saying that the twins shared the same amniotic sac, noting that it’s known as monochorionic monoamniotic twins, or Mo-Mo twins, which is a high-risk pregnancy. There is about a 50 percent chance the babies will survive after 26 weeks, the Mail noted.
The report said that the twins were born without any incident.
One-Child Policy?
Starting in the late 1970s, the Chinese regime implemented its “one-child policy,” which many experts have described as disastrous. The policy led to numerous forced abortions or the state confiscation of children.When she arrived, the woman recalled to NPR, “They made my brother sign a document saying that if I don’t get an abortion, he would suffer the consequences. I knew this meant he’d be detained in a camp.” The woman added that “I’d do anything to protect my brother, so I agreed to the abortion.”
In the dead of night, she said, CCP officials arrived at her house and took her to a hospital. After a scan, they said she was several weeks pregnant, which she apparently didn’t realize. The hospital then aborted her child.
The authorities told that her a third child wasn’t permitted.
“They told me I couldn’t have the baby because I’ve had two others, and that a third was not allowed,” she told the news outlet. “I told them my husband is a Kazakh citizen and that I’m carrying a Kazakh citizen. But they insisted that I have an abortion.”
They then threatened her, saying that her brother would be sent to a camp.
After the procedure, she said, “I was staying in the solitary ward. There was a camera facing my door. They wouldn’t let me see my children.” Then, they tried to force her to memorize Chinese communist propaganda.
According to the Guardian in a March 2019 report, by 2050, about a third of China’s population will be made up of people over the age of 60. The report said it will place a burden on families and state services, which may be irrecuperable.
“All the high-rises don’t change anything,” Zhang Yang, 36, who works for a state-run firm in Shenyang, told the Guardian. “Few people are having babies because the economy is so bad.”