"No matter how paranoid or conspiracy-minded you are, what the government is actually doing is worse than you imagine." - - - William Blum

December 10, 2004

The only species to trash its young


U.N. Details Plight of Children (L.A. Times; reg. req.)


By John Daniszewski - Times Staff Writer - December 10, 2004

LONDON — Governments are failing the children of the world, with more than 1 billion living in a state of severe threat from hunger, disease, exploitation or lack of security, the United Nations children's agency said Thursday. In a distressing indictment, UNICEF said that in spite of some pockets of progress in 2004, "we've failed to deliver on the promise of childhood. Too many governments are making informed, deliberate choices that actually hurt childhood," UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy said as she unveiled the agency's annual State of the World's Children report.

Among the report's findings:

• 640 million of the world's 2.2 billion children lack adequate shelter;

• 500 million children have no access to sanitation;

• 400 million lack safe water;

• 270 million receive no healthcare;

• 140 million, mostly girls, receive no education;

• 90 million are severely deprived of nutrition.

Even in developed countries, UNICEF said, the proportion of children living in low-income households has risen.

Bellamy said at a conference in Pakistan this week that nearly 10 million children younger than 5 die each year of diarrhea or measles.

The report released Thursday calls attention to the plight of children in war, with tens of thousands killed, maimed or raped each year. It details the hardships of children in northern Uganda and the Darfur region of Sudan.

In Uganda, children crowd into urban sanctuaries to avoid being forced to join the Lord's Resistance Army guerrilla group, only to routinely endure rape or other forms of abuse.

"The idea of childhood as a protected time of healthy growth has been effectively obliterated in northern Uganda," the report says, noting that 10,000 to 12,000 children have been taken by the guerrillas to become soldiers, porters or sex slaves.

Another trend is the explosion in the number of children orphaned by HIV and AIDS, 80% of them in sub-Saharan Africa. There are 15 million AIDS orphans, and the number continues to rise.

The number of children exploited in the multibillion-dollar global commercial sex industry is 2 million, the report says, higher than the population of some countries.

Bellamy said at a news conference that forgiving debts owed by Third World nations would help but would not be a panacea for the children. "Debt servicing is not a productive use of money," she said. "But also the choice governments have made to invest in war or not to invest in HIV-AIDS drugs also has an impact."

There have been some improvements in the last 13 years, with the number of juvenile deaths dropping in all regions except for sub-Saharan Africa, for a global decline of 18%. Public health campaigns in many Third World countries have led to a reduction in deaths from diarrhea to 1.9 million a year from 3 million since the early 1990s.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Janet Stobart of The Times' London Bureau contributed to this report.

No comments: