02/13/2015, 00.00
NEPAL
Send to a friend

In southern Nepal, 50 per cent of children suffer from malnutrition

by Christopher Sharma
Children are also victims of child labour practices and early marriages. Minority groups (especially Muslims) are the most affected. Widespread malnutrition has prevented Nepal from meeting its Millennium Development goals.

Kathmandu (AsiaNews) - In southern Nepal, 50 per cent of children, mostly from minority groups, suffer from malnutrition, this according to a study carried out by district development committees, in cooperation with UNICEF, in 15 southern districts of the country.

The survey was conducted as part of the Equality Hindrance Analysis Programme, which aims at reducing malnutrition in this country, and involved 123 village development committees, spread across 15 districts in southern Nepal.

The study considered quality and availability of health care, education, and drinking water, as well as the development of women and children.

For Shambu Kushwaha, a member of the Parsa District Development Committee (near Narayani, south of the capital), "children in the southern districts are vulnerable. Some 50 per cent suffer from malnutrition and child abuse," and "45 per cent is touched by child labour practices with the rest forced into early marriage."

Illiteracy, poverty, lack of opportunities for development and rising consumer prices are among the main causes of malnutrition.

The findings indicate that most disadvantaged children belong to minority groups, from lower castes, the poor and religious minorities (especially Muslims).

Guru Prasad Mainali, a local development officer in Parsa District, said that the authorities are discussing ways to change the situation. The government, he noted, plans to put in place some programmes in the southern districts and then extend them to other parts of the country.

In view of the situation, the country is still far from meeting the Millennium development goals for Nepali children set by the United Nations in 2000. They latter include the eradication of poverty and hunger, the reduction of child mortality, as well as gender equality and women's autonomy.

TAGs
Send to a friend
Printable version
CLOSE X
See also
'Ending hunger by 2030': the Caritas Asia program for small farmers
23/06/2018 12:48
Global crisis, food and fuel shocks and climate change threatening UN millennium development goals
31/03/2009
India: loosing battle to eliminate poverty, hunger and child mortality by 2015
05/01/2013
For the Holy See world needs to globalise solidarity
26/09/2008
Pope: appeal for victims of hurricanes in the Caribbean, and to world leaders, to defeat poverty
21/09/2008


Newsletter

Subscribe to Asia News updates or change your preferences

Subscribe now
“L’Asia: ecco il nostro comune compito per il terzo millennio!” - Giovanni Paolo II, da “Alzatevi, andiamo”