Technology, Discovery & Innovation
NewsFactor Network Sites:   NewsFactor.com Security CRM Business Sci-Tech Newsletters XML/RSS Feed  
   
Home Computing Digital Life Discovery Space More Topics...
Science News
Average Rating:
Rate this article:  
U.N. Says Hunger Stunts Some 200 Million Children U.N. Says Hunger Stunts Some 200 Million Children
By Ariel David And Maria Cheng Associated Press Writer
November 13, 2009 7:06AM

Bookmark and Share
The U.N. Children's Fund published a report saying that nearly 200 million children under five in poor countries were stunted by a lack of nutrients in their food. More than 90 percent of those children live in Africa and Asia, and more than a third of all deaths in that age group are linked to undernutrition, according to UNICEF.
 


Nearly 200 million children in poor countries have stunted growth because of insufficient nutrition, according to a new report published by UNICEF before a three-day international summit on the problem of world hunger.

The head of a U.N. food agency called on the world to join him in a day of fasting ahead of the summit to highlight the plight of 1 billion hungry people.

Jacques Diouf, director-general of the Food and Agriculture Organization, said Wednesday he hoped the fast would encourage action by world leaders who will take part in the meeting at his agency's headquarters starting Monday.

The U.N. Children's Fund published a report saying that nearly 200 million children under five in poor countries were stunted by a lack of nutrients in their food.

More than 90 percent of those children live in Africa and Asia, and more than a third of all deaths in that age group are linked to undernutrition, according to UNICEF.

While progress has been made in Asia -- rates of stunted growth dropped from 44 percent in 1990 to 30 percent last year -- there has been little success in Africa. There, the rate of stunted growth was about 38 percent in 1990. Last year, the rate was about 34 percent.

South Asia is a particular hotspot for the problem, with just Afghanistan, Nepal, India, Bangladesh and Pakistan accounting for 83 million hungry children under five.

"Unless attention is paid to addressing the causes of child and maternal undernutrition today, the costs will be considerably higher tomorrow," said UNICEF executive director Ann M. Veneman in a statement.

Diouf said he would begin a 24-hour fast on Saturday morning. The agency also launched an online petition against world hunger through a Web page featuring a video with Diouf counting from one to six to remind visitors that every six seconds a child dies from hunger.

The U.N. children's agency called for more strategies like vitamin A supplementation and breast-feeding to be rolled out more widely. That could cut the death rate in kids by up to 15 percent, UNICEF said.

Not everyone agreed.

"It is unrealistic to believe malnutrition can be addressed by any topdown U.N. scheme," said Philip Stevens, of International Policy Network, a London-based think tank. "The progress UNICEF's report points to in improving nutrition is almost certainly a result of economic growth, not U.N. strategies."

The Rome-based FAO announced earlier this year that hunger now affects a record 1.02 billion globally, or one in six people, with the financial meltdown, high food prices, drought and war blamed. (continued...)

1  |  2  |  Next Page >

 


© 2010 Associated Press under contract with YellowBrix. All rights reserved.
 

Tell Us What You Think
Your Comment:



Advertisement


 Science News
1.   Autism Risk for Kids of Older Mothers
2.   The Human Genome-Patent Dilemma
3.   California Is Moon-Junk Protector
4.   Study: SIDS Linked to Low Serotonin
5.   Fly Me To the Moon in a Space Taxi


advertisement
U.N. Warming Report MisinformsU.N. Warming Report Misinforms
Scientists promise to be more careful.
Average Rating:
U.S. Space Program: Final Frontier?U.S. Space Program: Final Frontier?
A Jetsons-like future seems unlikely.
Average Rating:
Good Night Moon, Hello RocketsGood Night Moon, Hello Rockets
Dramatic rocketry changes mandated.
Average Rating:


advertisement

Enterprise Hardware Spotlight
Microsoft Says Battery Woes Not Caused By Windows 7
Battery problems on Windows 7 machines are not caused by the operating system. That's the position of Stephen Sinofsky, head of the Windows division, in a long posting on the Windows engineering blog.
 
IBM's New POWER7 Servers Save Energy with Big Loads
IBM has unveiled high-capacity servers that are the first to be based on its new, multi-core POWER7 chip. It said the new line is designed "to manage the most demanding emerging applications."
 
'Dead Simple, Dirt Cheap' JooJoo Tablet Shipping Soon
The JooJoo, a web-browsing tablet device that is the subject of a high-profile legal dispute, appears on track to reach buyers at the end of February, but the tablet scene has dramatically changed.
 

Enterprise Technology Spotlight
Google May Add Facebook, Twitter Links to Gmail
Google will reportedly roll more social-networking features into Gmail, the fastest-growing e-mail service. The new features could save users the trouble of switching to Facebook or Twitter.
 
IBM's New POWER7 Servers Save Energy with Big Loads
IBM has unveiled high-capacity servers that are the first to be based on its new, multi-core POWER7 chip. It said the new line is designed "to manage the most demanding emerging applications."
 
IBM Opens Eco-Friendly, Cloud-Focused Data Center
IBM has opened its latest data center in North Carolina. Big Blue said the $362 million facility in Research Triangle Park is designed to support cloud computing and other new computing models.
 

Navigation
Sci-Tech Today
Home/Top News | Computing | Digital Life | Discovery | Space | Innovation | Health | Science News
Environment
NewsFactor Network Enterprise I.T. Sites
NewsFactor Technology News | Enterprise Security Today | CRM Daily

NewsFactor Business and Innovation Sites
Sci-Tech Today | NewsFactor Business Report

NewsFactor Services
FreeNewsFeed | Free Newsletters | Free Whitepapers | XML/RSS Feed

About NewsFactor Network | How To Contact Us | Article Reprints | Careers @ NewsFactor | Services for PR Pros | Top Tech Wire | How To Advertise

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service
© Copyright 2000-2010 NewsFactor Network. All rights reserved. Article rating technology by Blogowogo.