CNNさんのインスタグラム写真 - (CNNInstagram)「Aisha Aliyu is eight months pregnant and sprawled out on a mat in front of her house with four of her children spread around her feet. Two-year-old Hauwa and five-year-old Abba are both crying and tugging at their mother's hijab. She, in response, rolls her eyes and clicks her tongue at them. She looks tired.  The child Aliyu is carrying is her tenth. The last four were delivered in the Durumi Camp, a place in Nigeria's capital city, Abuja, that she and an estimated more than 3,000 other internally displaced people call home.  In 2013, Aliyu fled her home in the village of Wala in Nigeria's northeastern Borno State to its capital, Maiduguri. She said her village was attacked and much of it burned down by armed Islamist group, Boko Haram. Two years later, the militant group attacked Maiduguri, forcing Aliyu to again migrate, this time travelling over 856km south to Abuja with her husband and five children.  The now 39-year-old saw having many children as a way of replacing her relatives killed by the insurgents, but reveals she was done after her last pregnancy in 2021 and began using contraceptives. However, she became pregnant again this year.  Aliyu is one of many internally displaced women bearing children in Nigeria's camps, with some grounds not even housing a health post or shelter for birth, instead needing women to go into labor in their own shelters or that of their birth attendant.  Tap the link in bio for more.   📸 : Taibat Ajiboye for CNN  1. Aisha Aliyu. 2. The nurse takes the weight of the pregnant women during antenatal. 3. The camp nurse, Isa Umar examines a pregnant woman during antenatal session. 4. With Aisha almost full term, she is no longer able to go to fetch water and now has to pay up to N500 daily for it to be delivered to her home. 5. The makeshift delivery room partitioned in the shipping container used as the camp's health post. 6. A volunteer doctor brought his own kit to do blood tests at the Durumi camp. 7. Aisha with five of her children.」11月30日 1時08分 - cnn

CNNのインスタグラム(cnn) - 11月30日 01時08分


Aisha Aliyu is eight months pregnant and sprawled out on a mat in front of her house with four of her children spread around her feet. Two-year-old Hauwa and five-year-old Abba are both crying and tugging at their mother's hijab. She, in response, rolls her eyes and clicks her tongue at them. She looks tired.

The child Aliyu is carrying is her tenth. The last four were delivered in the Durumi Camp, a place in Nigeria's capital city, Abuja, that she and an estimated more than 3,000 other internally displaced people call home.

In 2013, Aliyu fled her home in the village of Wala in Nigeria's northeastern Borno State to its capital, Maiduguri. She said her village was attacked and much of it burned down by armed Islamist group, Boko Haram. Two years later, the militant group attacked Maiduguri, forcing Aliyu to again migrate, this time travelling over 856km south to Abuja with her husband and five children.

The now 39-year-old saw having many children as a way of replacing her relatives killed by the insurgents, but reveals she was done after her last pregnancy in 2021 and began using contraceptives. However, she became pregnant again this year.

Aliyu is one of many internally displaced women bearing children in Nigeria's camps, with some grounds not even housing a health post or shelter for birth, instead needing women to go into labor in their own shelters or that of their birth attendant.

Tap the link in bio for more.

📸 : Taibat Ajiboye for CNN

1. Aisha Aliyu.
2. The nurse takes the weight of the pregnant women during antenatal.
3. The camp nurse, Isa Umar examines a pregnant woman during antenatal session.
4. With Aisha almost full term, she is no longer able to go to fetch water and now has to pay up to N500 daily for it to be delivered to her home.
5. The makeshift delivery room partitioned in the shipping container used as the camp's health post.
6. A volunteer doctor brought his own kit to do blood tests at the Durumi camp.
7. Aisha with five of her children.


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