• Friday, March 29, 2024

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‘Nearly half Sri Lankan kids need aid’: UNICEF appeals for USD 25 million

With soaring food prices, 70 per cent of households are now reporting reduced food consumption.

A child lies in a bed in Lady Ridgeway Hospital for Children in Colombo on April 21, 2022 (Photo by ISHARA S. KODIKARA/AFP via Getty Images)

By: Krishna bhanu

The debilitating crisis in Sri Lanka has left nearly half of the children in the country in need of some form of humanitarian assistance, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).

The UN has launched an appeal to address the urgent needs of the most vulnerable population within the next four months. To scale up the response to the rising needs of children in the next seven months, UNICEF is today appealing for USD 25.3 million to save lives and bring nutrition, healthcare, safe drinking water, education, and mental health services to 1.7 million vulnerable children in Sri Lanka.

“The current crisis is stretching families to their limits,” said Christian Skoog, UNICEF Representative in Sri Lanka. “Children are going to bed distressed and on empty stomachs. Many children are not regularly attending school, and hospitals are fast running out of medicines, including for children and pregnant women. If we do not act now, it is the most vulnerable boys and girls who will pay the highest price for a crisis not of their making.”

Even before the current crisis, Sri Lanka had the second highest child malnutrition rate in South Asia, and 2 in 5 infants were not fed the minimum acceptable diet.

With soaring food prices, 70 per cent of households are now reporting reduced food consumption, and the fuel crisis and frequent power cuts are hindering vital services for children, including healthcare and education. Access to safe water for drinking and domestic use is declining, posing an increased risk of water-borne diseases.

“The current crisis is disproportionately impacting the most vulnerable boys and girls in Sri Lanka, who were already confronted with the toxic combination of poverty, COVID-19, and repeated climate-related disasters,” said Skoog.

“UNICEF is strongly urging donors to support Sri Lanka’s children through its humanitarian appeal. Together, we can ensure the steady gains for children made by Sri Lanka over many years are not permanently reversed.”

(ANI)

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