The siege has been bad, but we didn’t fear it as much as we fear the bombs.

My eldest daughter is 16. She was six months pregnant, but suffered a miscarriage two weeks ago. I had a son of 12, but he was killed by a piece of shrapnel that pierced his heart. My youngest is a baby boy, aged three months – I gave birth to him during the siege.

I gave birth a month early, because of the panic attacks and the heavy shelling.

In the past two years, I’ve had miscarriage after miscarriage, and this pregnancy too was full of problems. I went into threatened premature labour in the second and third month, and had to visit hospital every 10 days. I had low blood pressure, severe anaemia and low calcium levels. I was always tired and dizzy.

Because of the siege, there are shortages of all kinds of foods. There are a lot of underweight babies because mothers’ diets are affected.

In the first week of August, the midwife told me to prepare myself for the birth and buy the drugs I needed. I got the medications from pharmacies, as they weren’t available in hospitals.

Two days later, at 5am, my waters broke. There was no one to take me to the hospital, and there was no public transport either. We couldn’t call an ambulance – there is so little fuel that ambulances only come for the most critical cases. In the end my husband stopped a car in the road and begged the driver to take us to any hospital.

There was very intense shelling, and we didn’t know if we would make it. He drove at incredible speed because of the bombardment – we got there in just 12 minutes. My biggest fear was that we would run out of fuel in the middle of the road with the shells raining down around us.

During the labour, I was on my own. There’s no one here in east Aleppo from my or my husband’s family – we are the only ones left. My husband waited downstairs.

Five hours later, I gave birth. It was after I delivered the baby that the problems began. I was haemorrhaging, so they put ice bars on my stomach and inside my womb to try to stop the bleeding.

I did my best to breastfeed the baby, despite having had nothing to eat and being undernourished.

When a baby is born, some people believe they are making up for the children they have lost. I think it’s a huge mistake

I was discharged on the same day, because the shelling was so intense and the hospital was inadequately protected. After I left the hospital, four missiles exploded right in front of the building.

My baby stayed on in the hospital for another 15 days. He weighed just 1.2kg and I didn’t expect him to live. But he has hung on.

In August, during the early months of the siege, things weren’t as bad as they are now. They still had formula milk in the hospital, so they’d fix a bottle for my baby and feed him, or else I would express my milk into a bottle and feed it to him.

But now there’s no formula milk around, and I’m grinding up rice and feeding it to him instead of milk. He is losing weight and is very weak. Am I supposed to sit and watch him die in front of me?

My other children are all incredibly thin, too, because we have almost nothing to eat.

We haven’t had any nappies for three months, so people are using rags instead, but this gives the babies rashes. My daughter has a very bad cough, but the children’s hospital has been bombed and I don’t know where to take her. The baby has difficulty breathing, as well as other health problems, but we can’t take him out of east Aleppo. We are just waiting for our children to die.

When a baby is born, some people believe they are making up for the children they have lost. But for me, in these conditions, I think it’s a huge mistake. After I gave birth to him, I felt so sad. Did I give birth to him to see a life like this?

I don’t even know if we’ll survive this. The children get so frightened whenever they hear a plane – they run towards me. It breaks my heart.

I just hope that my children stay safe and sound. I hope that they don’t get injured, because there are no hospitals to take them to, and I can’t watch my children die in front of me.