Increasing food prices worsens child malnutrition
A year of record food prices has forced millions of parents in the
developing world to cut back on food for their children, says aid agency
Save the Children.
The agency surveyed families in India, Bangladesh, Peru, Pakistan and
Nigeria. One parent in six said their children were abandoning school to
help out by working for food.
The agency said the price hikes had worsened child malnutrition and
could hit progress reducing child deaths.
It warned that if no action was taken, half a billion children would
be physically and mentally stunted over the next 15 years.
The survey was carried out in the five countries - where, Save the
Children says, half the world's malnourished children live - by
international polling agency Globescan.
It found nearly a quarter of a billion parents had cut back on food
for the family in the past year.
A third of parents surveyed said their children complained about not
having enough to eat, the agency said.
One in six said their children were missing school to work to buy
food, the agency revealed in its report A Life Free from Hunger:
Tackling Child Malnutrition. "The world has made dramatic progress in
reducing child deaths, down from 12 to 7.6 million, but this momentum
will stall if we fail to tackle malnutrition," said Save the Children
Chief Executive Justin Forsyth.
The agency wants the UK to lead the way in reducing hunger and
protecting children from food price rises - starting with a Hunger
Summit when world leaders are in London for the Olympics. |