Hunger. The effects of isolation in children in Nepal – the Child’s Day like never before! Photos, video and article

In Africa and Asia, hunger, not the virus, is the biggest threat today.
And it is a real catastrophe that will decimate the population – especially children in Uganda, Kenya, Angola, Cameroon, Tanzania, Bolivia and Nepal. We have to help them!
We have received appeals for food aid from our branches – funds for the purchase of basic products. At this stage, it is the most urgent, although the resources and availability of products is very limited due to the closure of the business and the ordered isolation, which is still ongoing.
Our children’s families do not have supplies and cannot work – there is no government or social support of any kind.
In Nepal itself, the closure of the country has already lasted 3 months, and unfortunately the end is not in sight, as the number of cases increases, not decreasing due to the return to the country of people previously working abroad.
Covid-19 is now spreading to all districts and medical assistance is virtually non-existent. Public health care is practically non-existent and private is not affordable. Infection will signify a sentence.
Malnutrition makes children weaker.

1 st June is the International Children’s Day, and June 4th – African Children’s Day.

Usually, for the children’s day, we organized a trip to the zoo, unique games with balloons and prizes. This year we are asking you for help so that children survive.
We need PLN 150 for the child’s family in the program to make them survive a month.
20 kg of rice, oil, salt, lentils and similar products will be purchased.

Food will be immediately purchased on the spot from a donation to the account:

Mają Przyszłość Foundation, Alior Bank:

PLN : 44 2490 0005 0000 4600 3246 9899
IBAN PL44 2490 0005 0000 4600 3246 9899

EUR: 69 2490 0005 0000 4600 1195 6471
IBAN PL69 2490 0005 0000 4600 1195 6471

Transfer title: “supplementary feeding – donation” (Polish: “dożywianie – darowizna”)
or sent via online payments (transfer / payment card / blik etc.):
https://www.majaprzyszlosc.org.pl/przekaz-darowizne-na-rzecz-dzieci
You can also buy the food parcel through our shop:
www.sklep.majaprzyszlosc.org.pl

Uganda’s children are asking for food:

Below, we invite you to the article, published a few days ago. All photos on this page are taken from our facility in Nepal and show the situation there – in children’s homes. Published on May 23rd, Saturday, 2020 , onlinekhabar.com

Malnutrition in children of Nepal has now become an elephant in the room due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The United Nations child rights agency, Unicef, has warned that 4,000 children could die in Nepal in the next six months as the pandemic has crippled the healthcare system. A hunger crisis could overtake Nepal if the country cannot prioritise our immediate needs and act on them promptly.

Before the lockdown started, almost 850,000 children under five (27 per cent of the total) were underweight and over 300,000 (10 per cent) wasted (too thin for their height). Similarly, 1.8 million adolescent girls and boys (32 per cent) were stunted (Unicef). These numbers have certainly increased due to the current pandemic situation.

Given that this was the situation before the pandemic, imagine the situation of children in the family who have been deprived of jobs, facing the lack of sufficient and nutrient food. Acute respiratory infections and diarrhoea, Nepal’s leading causes of death among children under five, are linked to acute malnutrition, according to the Ministry of Health and Population. It means the Nepali children are at a ‘double risk’—of the Covid-19 and malnutrition if we do not act promptly.
The Covid-19 is causing disruptions in medical supply chains and straining financial and human resources. Malnutrition contributes to 25,000 child deaths in Nepal per year, accounting for 52 per cent of child deaths, higher than any other cause (Unicef, 2019). And, poor health conditions, which arise due to poor sanitation, poor hygiene habits, and poor living conditions are leading causes of malnutrition. Those who are hit the hardest fall in the low wealth quartile and their children have to work day in and day out to make hand-to-mouth survival. Further, there are people who cannot maintain sanitation because of the lack of accessibility and affordability to the means of resources.

In addition to this, more than three million of the country’s 30.4 million
people do not have access to safe drinking water despite the country’s abundant freshwater resources. Nearly 19 million do not have access to ‘improved sanitation–public standpipes, covered wells or springs, piped household connections or boreholes (Forum for Water and Sanitation, and The New Humanitarian).
The question, then, is how they can follow sanitation protocols sanctioned by the government to be safe from the Covid-19. Or can they continue to neglect the safety of those malnutrition-vulnerable children amid this pandemic?
While most children with wasting are in the remote hills of mid-west and far- west regions, considered the poorest areas nationwide, the situation for severe acute malnutrition is worse in the southern fertile plains bordering India, known as the Terai. Now, also with more confirmed positive cases of Covid-19, we cannot neglect that  Terai is in the red zone . Here the pandemic is impacting on the nutritional level of children because of the lack and unaffordability of basic food supplies, disruption of the food supply chain, loss of income, and livelihood during the quarantine. Social distancing has reduced farmers’ and consumers’ access to food markets, due to which food prices are on the rise and access to proper consumption is going down.
More than 15 per cent of children are estimated to be acutely malnourished due to poor sanitation, contaminated water, and waterborne disease outbreaks during the monsoon, according to the government. During the season, diseases like flu, malaria, and diarrhoea will increase, along with the increased risk of malnutrition.

The focus of the government now is directed towards the control of pandemic and a large sum of money is being invested to buy necessary utilities. Amid the risk of the virus, there is also a high probability of the death of children due to malnutrition.
Nepal has to bring down child mortality to 25 per 1,000 live births to meet the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goal target. However, this seems like an impossible landmark to follow, now in a condition where economic growth is compromised. The main survival technique is to cope with the coronavirus crisis as fast as we can to prevent future fatalities.
Our priority must address the immediate, urgent needs of medical equipment and supplies, technical assistance, and financing to stop the Covid-19 and mitigate its impacts. Any delays will see our liability rise, as food production, growth, and the economy continue to deteriorate. Local agriculture needs to regenerate as fast as we can, to maintain the balance of price, supply chain, and nutrition level in the country.

Published on May 23rd, Saturday, 2020 , onlinekhabar.com

Nasi darczyńcy