Two formerly conjoined Bhutanese twin girls have arrived home after being separated in an operation in Australia, sparking joy when their family saw them walking independently.
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Twenty-month-old Nima and Dawa returned to Bhutan on Thursday after a 22-hour flight from Melbourne with their mother, four months after their operation.
The girls had been joined at the torso and shared a liver.
Barely controlling his emotions, their father, Sonam Tshering, said it was like a miracle. He took them from the airport to a monastery to light a lamp in prayer.
The girls were separated in an operation in early November at Melbourne's Royal Children's Hospital that lasted almost six hours.
They recovered following the operation at a retreat run by the charity that brought them to Australia.
Australian Associated Press