News, views and top stories in your inbox. Don't miss our must-read newsletter Sign up Thank you for subscribing We have more newsletters Show me See our privacy notice Invalid Email

The bustling operating theatre fell silent. Doctors and nurses stared at each other, stunned.

And, as he stood at his wife’s bedside and looked into the eyes of his newborn child for the first time, new father Francis Tshibangu’s joy turned to disbelief.

“I was clutching Arlette’s hand as they lifted Daniel from her,” Francis says.

“He was covered in blood… but then I saw his skin was white and his hair was blond. My jaw dropped open.”

In a million-to-one quirk of nature, Francis and Arlette, who have no white relations, had given birth to a white baby.

The genetic mix-up has baffled experts, who say Daniel is NOT an albino with no skin pigment – not to mention the parents, who already have a two-year-old black son, Seth.

Francis adds: “My first thought was ‘Wow, is he really mine?’

“I was too stunned to speak and I could see the doctors ­looking at each other, thinking the baby couldn’t be mine.

“Then Arlette and I looked at each other and smiled and I knew he was.

“I have been with my wife for three years so there was never a question of ­infidelity, but seeing his white skin was a surprise to say the least.

“The initial reaction from the nurses must have been that Arlette had had an affair. Their faces were a picture, but then I’m sure mine was too.

“I’m sure they were thinking ‘oh my gosh… what has been going on here and what’s he going to do?’

“While the nurses were marvelling at Daniel’s blond hair, neither Arlette nor I said a word. We were just in too much shock at his white skin.

“When I bent down and kissed him I got a better look at his features and could see he looked just like me and Arlette. He has my nose and my wife’s lips.

“All we can say is that Daniel is our miracle and, though we are shocked by his white skin, we feel very blessed – he’s beautiful.”

Fertility experts describe the birth as “extraordinary” and can’t explain whythe couple have one white child and one black child.

Proudly cuddling her son, Arlette says: “The reaction in the operating theatre was one of shocked silence, myself ­included.

“I stared at Daniel with my eyes wide. The looks on the faces of the doctors and nurses said it all… everyone was wondering why I had a white baby.

“But as the nurse put his little pink body in my arms I bonded with him instantly. When I looked at him all I felt was love.

“Like any mum who has just given birth, my main concern was that he was healthy, which he is.

“When we pictured having a second baby, I guess we just imagined a mini Seth… who is black just like us.

“It is just an amazing twist of nature. I don’t know why these things happen. All you can do is take life as it comes, these things are God’s choice.

“There was a fleeting ­second of worry but I love my husband and I know he loves and trusts me so I knew it would be OK.I have never cheated on Francis and I never will.

“I was in shock too when I saw Daniel and I think that was evident from my expression.”

And the couple have met with puzzled glances ever since Daniel’s arrival, at Leicester Royal Infirmary on March 4.

Francis, 28, a sociology student, says: “We never try to cover Daniel up to avoid the looks as that wouldn’t be fair on him.

“But we dread him crying while we are in a shop or on the street. You can see people looking at us thinking ‘What are that black couple doing with that white baby?’ I am sure there are a few people who think we have stolen the baby.

“Just the other day we were on the train with Seth and Daniel and I could see out of the corner of my eye the man opposite staring at us. Every time I looked up he would quickly look down at his newspaper but I could see he was trying to figure it out. Sometimes people are much more open about it though, and on the same journey two old women were talking about us pretty loudly – though I think they thought they were whispering.

“They gestured over to us and ­wondered why Daniel was with us. It can be very awkward. Arlette in particular is very shy so doesn’t like all the attention. But while Daniel may be white with blond hair, he looks exactly like us. He is the spitting image of his big brother Seth, just a different colour.”

And Francis, who is originally from Congo but has lived in Britain for 10 years, said he and Arlette, 25, were nervous about having to tell their families the good news.

He says: “I rang my mum Monique and the first word out of her mouth was ‘Wow!’ But she was thrilled to have her new grandson and said the most ­important thing was that he was happy and healthy.Like her, I feel lucky Daniel was born here, where things are more medically advanced. In Africa I don’t think they would understand that these sorts of crazy things can happen. Had he been born in the Congo there would have been a lot more questions about Arlette’s ­fidelity and it could have put a real strain on the marriage.”

The couple, who met in the Congo in 2007 and wed a year later before settling in the East Midlands, believe Daniel must be a throwback to Arlette’s great-great-great-grandmother, who is thought to have given birth to a white baby too.

Francis says: “That was six generations and we don’t even know if that was true. As far as our immediate ancestry goes, our grandparents and great-grandparents have all been 100 per cent black.”

The couple do have worries for their little boy growing up. Arlette says: “Mainly we fear people will taunt him and ask him lots of questions. Children can be cruel and we feel very protective of Daniel.

“When the boys are older and we take them out together people will assume we are taking our son and his white friend.

“We don’t want people asking him if he’s adopted or him feeling ­self-conscious if he calls out ‘mummy’ in the ­playground.”

Francis adds: “For us it’s important that he is friends with everyone and every race.

“Daniel will have a lot of questions and we won’t be able to give him the answers.

“Even just filling in a form will open a can of worms. When it asks your ethnicity what box will he tick?

“Who knows exactly what the future holds? We will have to discover that together as he grows up.

“To us, his skin colour isn’t important. The most important thing is that we have a very healthy little boy who we love very much.

“We are still struggling to understand how this has happened. We cannot ­believe we have a baby who is white.

“I know there will be some who say my wife has had an affair but I trust her completely and know that isn’t the case. Even if she had had an affair with a white man, you would expect amixed-race baby with black hair, not a white baby with soft blond hair like little Daniel.

“We call him our special baby, he is our gift.

“God works in mysterious ways and I’m not sure why he chose us – we are just normal people – but I’m glad he did and we couldn’t be prouder, of both our special boys.”

Professor Robert Winston - 'Birth is truly extraordinary'

LEADING fertility expert ­Professor Robert Winston says the birth is “extraordinary”.

“This is unbelievably rare and one of the first cases I’ve heard of in the UK,” Lord ­Winston says. “The fact it’s ­happened before in the same family – albeit generations ago – is significant.

“The genetic differences between black and white ­people are much slighter than we think. I can only think there’s been a mild mutation.

“It may also be that the part of Africa the parents are from – Congo – is inherent to a certain genetic instability. There’s been very little research.

“Events like this just go to show how ­similar we all are.”