Central African Republic's children are world's most deprived, UNICEF
says
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[July 02, 2024]
GENEVA (Reuters) - The Central African Republic's three million
children are the world's most deprived, with widespread malnutrition,
inadequate healthcare access and instability putting the country at high
risk of a humanitarian crisis, UNICEF said on Tuesday.
Half of the country's children do not have access to health services,
and almost 40% suffer from chronic malnutrition, the U.N. children's
agency said. Few have access to clean water, sanitation or healthy
diets.
With global attention focused on the war in Gaza and other conflicts,
the plight of the African nation's children has become "painfully
invisible", Meritxell Relano Arana, UNICEF representative in the Central
African Republic (CAR), told reporters in Geneva.
"The three million girls and boys of the Central Africa Republic face
the highest registered level of overlapping and interconnected crises
and deprivation in the world," she said.
That means CAR is now ranked as the country most at-risk for sliding
into humanitarian crisis, she added.
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A UNICEF logo is pictured outside their offices in Geneva,
Switzerland, January 30, 2017. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo
Violence in the CAR, one of the
world's poorest countries, waned after a peace accord in February
2019 between the government and 14 armed groups, but the situation
remains volatile as swathes of territory remain outside government
control.
(Reporting by Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber; Editing by Helen Popper)
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