UNICEF expresses concern over children education, malnutrition in Afghanistan
UNICEF expresses concern over children
education, malnutrition in Afghanistan
The United Nations Children's Fund
(UNICEF) representative in Afghanistan has expressed concerns over the status
of children, poor access to school, and malnutrition in Afghanistan.
"We have
very serious concern about the education of children in Afghanistan, because
there are 3.5 million children who are out of school; while they are supposed
to be in school," Adele Khodr, UNICEF's country representative, told
Xinhua in an exclusive interview.
She said 75
percent of those 3.5 million children out of school are girls. In conflict-hit
Afghanistan where people, mostly in the countryside deeply believe in old
traditions, many parents are reluctant to send their girls to school due to
security concerns and cultural barriers.
"Even if
the girls go to school, they leave the school earlier, when they became age of
12 or 15 years," the UNICEF representative said. In the militancy-plagued
areas where armed opposition groups including Taliban and Islamic State (IS)
outfits are active, many schools remain closed, according to local officials in
the countryside.
Early this year,
an official with the Ministry of Education, Asadullah Mohaqiq, while briefing
Mushrano Jirga or upper house of parliament, confirmed that 1,005 schools
remained closed across the conflict-hit Afghanistan due to security problems,
poverty and other reasons, depriving countless children including girls of the
chance to get education.
Khodr also
expressed concern over the quality of teaching for children and their learning
levels. The education situation has been improved in Afghanistan since the
collapse of Taliban regime in late 2001.
According to
Afghan Presidential Palace, less than 1 million children had access to
education during Taliban reign, which collapsed in late 2001, but the number
has soared to more than 9.5 million children with 40 percent of them girls
attending 15,000 schools across the country in 2016.
However, the
country still needs to do more to facilitate all children to get access to
school. Another challenging issue for children in Afghanistan is malnutrition,
said the UNICEF representative.
Khodr said there
are 600,000 children who are severely malnourished in Afghanistan, describing
the situation as "severe acute malnutrition."
She said the
rate of stunting or chronic malnutrition in Afghanistan is 41 percent; not only
does this mean that children are short for their age, but more importantly it
means that the mental and intellectual capacity of these children once they
become adults is stunted too.
Noting that the
malnutrition problem has a direct economic impact, she said investing in
nutrition is investing in the country's economic growth. She also noted that
Afghanistan is one of the three countries in the world still fighting the
crippling polio disease.
The official
said polio is a disease that affects children all their life, adding that so
far this year, 10 polio cases have been registered in the country, mostly in
the southern Kandahar, Helmand and eastern Nangarhar provinces. Access to all
the districts is difficult due to security reasons.
"And there
are only 43 percent of children in Afghanistan under one year of age who are
fully immunized against the five vaccine preventable infectious diseases,
meaning they have received all the vaccines," she said. This has a direct
impact on immunity of children and therefore on polio.
The official has
also expressed concern over living conditions of street children, saying the
children may easily fall victim of the war and smugglers and also may be
recruited by fighting forces.
According to a
report of United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan released in October,
the ongoing conflict in Afghanistan had caused 2,480 child casualties including
689 deaths and 1,791 injured during the first three quarters of this year.
Khodr, who has
been UNICEF country director in Afghanistan since June 2016, said that UNICEF
Afghanistan program is one of the biggest for UNICEF and among the top 10 in
the world.
She added that
UNICEF, besides supporting 300,000 out of 600,000 severely malnourished
children with food and clothes, would also bring teaching and learning
materials like pens and back bags to more than 1 million children in
Afghanistan.
UNICEF also
helps around 75,000 children to get education in community based schools in
areas where the government does not have schools, besides buying vaccines for
preventable diseases and supporting 3,700 social mobilizers to go house to
house and give awareness about polio risk to help the war-ravaged country get
rid of the crippling disease. Enditem
---
Comments
Post a Comment