BANGKOK, Aug 5: The widening gap between the rich and poor in Asia’s booming economies like India and China is leaving many mothers and children behind and putting youngsters’ lives at risk, the UN said on Tuesday.

UNICEF, the United Nations children’s agency, said that more than 40 per cent of the world’s children who died before their fifth birthdays in 2006 lived in the Asia Pacific region, and that great improvements were needed.

“The divide between rich and poor is rising at a troubling rate within subregions of Asia Pacific, leaving vast numbers of mothers and children at risk,” the State of Asia Pacific’s Children 2008 report said.

Some 2.1 million under-fives died in India in 2006, and the report said the fast-growing economy must improve its health care, nutrition, education, gender equality and child protection across the board.

South Asia was lagging on public spending, with only 1.1 per cent of gross domestic product allocated to health care.

The boom in private sector health care for the region’s expanding middle classes was battering public health facilities, the report added, tempting qualified staff to better paid jobs in private clinics or overseas.

With half of the world’s kids living in the Asia Pacific, the report said that extending health services to the poorest people was key to achieving the 2015 global goal of reducing under-five mortality by two-thirds of 1990 levels.

“However the region’s robust economic growth, the fastest in the world since 1990, has lifted millions out of poverty,” UNICEF said in a statement.

Within the region, Southeast Asia made the largest strides in combating child deaths, with mortality for under-fives now half what it was in 1990.

In China, UNICEF said child mortality had dropped between 1970 and 1990, but added the decrease had since slowed and that the country needed to take big strides to regain early progress.

“China’s overall disease profile now resembles that of an industrialized country, but inequities in access to quality health care and huge disparities in health outcomes remain prevalent and entrenched,” it added.

The Asia Pacific as a whole has seen a 34 per cent reduction in the under-fives mortality rate since 1990. Out of every 1,000 births in the region in 2006, 59 infants died before their fifth birthday. The 2015 target is 30 deaths per 1,000 births.

Pneumonia, diarrhoea and malnutrition are the main killers, the report said.

“But the vast inequalities in income, geography, gender and ethnicity are essentially what stand in the way of children surviving and thriving,” it added.

—AFP

Opinion

Editorial

Falling temperatures
Updated 04 Jan, 2025

Falling temperatures

Vitally important for stakeholders to acknowledge, understand politicians can still challenge opposing parties’ narratives without also being in a constant state of war with each other.
Agriculture census
04 Jan, 2025

Agriculture census

ACCURATE information relating to agricultural activities is vital for data-driven future planning, policymaking, as...
Biometrics for kids
04 Jan, 2025

Biometrics for kids

ALTHOUGH the move has caused a panic among weary parents mortified at the thought of carting their children to Nadra...
Kurram peace deal
03 Jan, 2025

Kurram peace deal

It is the state’s responsibility to ensure that people of all sects can travel to and from the district without fear.
Pension reform
03 Jan, 2025

Pension reform

THE federal government has finally implemented several parametric reforms introduced in the last two budgets to...
The Indian hand
03 Jan, 2025

The Indian hand

OFFICIALS of the Modi regime were operating under a rather warped sense of reality, playing out Bollywood fantasies...