UNICEF: 16m Babies Born into Conflict in 2015
Executive Director, UNICEF, Anthony Lake
Urges world to translate promises into action to benefit most vulnerable children in 2016
Kasim Sumaina in Abuja
The United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) disclosed on Thursday that
more than 16 million babies were born into conflict zones in 2015,
making one in eight of all births worldwide.
UNICEF noted that every two seconds, a newborn takes its first breath in the midst of conflict, often in terrifying circumstances and without access to medical care, a figure it said underscores the vulnerability faced by increasing numbers of children.
Executive Director, UNICEF, Anthony Lake, gave this hint in a press release made available by to journalist in Abuja.
According to him, "Too many children are now starting their lives in extreme circumstances – from conflict to natural disasters, poverty, disease or malnutrition. Can there be a worse start in life?”
"More than a quarter of a billion children – or 1 in 9 – live in countries and areas in conflict and face enormous obstacles to their health, education and well-being. More than half a billion children live in areas where floods are extremely common and nearly 160 million live in high or extremely high drought severity zones. Children represent almost half of all people living in extreme poverty although they make up roughly a third of the world’s population.
He said: "More than 200,000 children applied for asylum in European Union countries in the first nine months of 2015, adding to the 30 million children across the globe forced from their homes by 2014 due to war, violence and persecution. More people are displaced now than at any moment since World War II.
"In addition to conflict, poverty, the effects of climate change and lack of opportunity are making children increasingly vulnerable and have pushed millions on dangerous journeys away from their homes.
Lake stated that "In conflict-affected countries such as Afghanistan, the Central African Republic, Iraq, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen, or on perilous journeys to escape fighting, newborn children and their mothers face enormous risks.
Pregnant mothers are in danger of giving birth without medical help and in unsanitary conditions. Their children are more likely to die before they reach their fifth birthdays and to experience extreme – or “toxic” – stress, which can inhibit their long-term emotional and cognitive development.
UNICEF noted that every two seconds, a newborn takes its first breath in the midst of conflict, often in terrifying circumstances and without access to medical care, a figure it said underscores the vulnerability faced by increasing numbers of children.
Executive Director, UNICEF, Anthony Lake, gave this hint in a press release made available by to journalist in Abuja.
According to him, "Too many children are now starting their lives in extreme circumstances – from conflict to natural disasters, poverty, disease or malnutrition. Can there be a worse start in life?”
"More than a quarter of a billion children – or 1 in 9 – live in countries and areas in conflict and face enormous obstacles to their health, education and well-being. More than half a billion children live in areas where floods are extremely common and nearly 160 million live in high or extremely high drought severity zones. Children represent almost half of all people living in extreme poverty although they make up roughly a third of the world’s population.
He said: "More than 200,000 children applied for asylum in European Union countries in the first nine months of 2015, adding to the 30 million children across the globe forced from their homes by 2014 due to war, violence and persecution. More people are displaced now than at any moment since World War II.
"In addition to conflict, poverty, the effects of climate change and lack of opportunity are making children increasingly vulnerable and have pushed millions on dangerous journeys away from their homes.
Lake stated that "In conflict-affected countries such as Afghanistan, the Central African Republic, Iraq, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen, or on perilous journeys to escape fighting, newborn children and their mothers face enormous risks.
Pregnant mothers are in danger of giving birth without medical help and in unsanitary conditions. Their children are more likely to die before they reach their fifth birthdays and to experience extreme – or “toxic” – stress, which can inhibit their long-term emotional and cognitive development.
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