Tag Archives: UNICEF

Caring for India's Women and Children

By Dr. Jill Biden

Dr. Biden meets with community leaders, US and India agency officials, and NGOS

Dr. Biden meets with community leaders, US and India agency officials, and NGOS to discuss joint efforts to end childhood malnutrition. (Photo Credit: Carrie Levay)

Last June, the United States, India, Ethiopia, and UNICEF hosted the Global Child Survival Call to Action event in Washington, DC. In India, 43% of children under the age of five are underweight and 48% are chronically undernourished. To address this and other causes of child deaths that can be prevented, India issued a national Call to Action for Child Survival and Development to end all preventable child deaths by 2035.

Yesterday I wrote about my time in Kachhpura and how they are working to end malnutrition. Today I attended a roundtable discussion with Government of Maharashtra Officials, USAID, UNICEF, Indian civil society and private sector representatives to learn about their efforts to improve nutrition across the country and to make available other proven health interventions to prevent child deaths, such as immunizations, clean water, and treatment of pneumonia and diarrhea.

As a mom, this is a personal issue for me as no parent wants to see her child go hungry or be sick. I am inspired by how the communities that I have visited have launched into action to tackle this problem. I am heartened to learn of the joint efforts of the Indian government, civil society and private sector in close collaboration with the U.S. and UN Agencies to target children between 0 and 35 months old, one of the most vulnerable groups. I look forward to seeing their continued progress in the future.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at The White House

UN: 1.2 million Syria refugees in Jordan this year

The United Nations is predicting that the number of Syrian refugees in neighboring Jordan will more than double to 1.2 million by the end of this year.

UNICEF spokeswoman Marixie Mercado said Friday that the U.N. agency for children urgently needs new funding to continue coping with the influx of refugees. Mercado said: “The needs are rising exponentially, and we are broke.”

The number of Syrian refugees in Jordan is approaching half a million. Jordan has a population of 6 million.

The total number of Syrians who have fled their country and are seeking assistance hit 1 million a month ago. The U.N. says the pace of refugees fleeing has accelerated dramatically in recent months.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

UNICEF Tap Project Lets Activists Provide Clean Drinking Water To Children Via Facebook

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Using Facebook now has the power to make it rain.

Throughout World Water Month, UNICEF is giving Facbook users the chance to provide clean drinking water to those in need — and raise awareness for the issue — by joining the organization’s Tap Project on the social networking site. Participants donate $5 to get involved, which provides potable water to a child for 200 days, and can invite two friends to join the effort, too.

The project aims to both help children who are without clean water and to inform the world of just how critical the problem is. Waterborne illnesses are the second leading cause of preventable childhood deaths in the world and the cause of nearly 4,000 deaths of children under the age of five every day.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

UNICEF urges Israel to reform detention of minors

Israel must reform its system of military detention for Palestinian minors, a U.N. report said Wednesday, saying an in-depth study showed it systematically and gravely violated their rights.

The United Nations Children’s Fund report was based on interviews with 400 children and minors arrested, detained and jailed in Israel‘s military court system as well as meetings with lawyers and Israeli officials.

“Ill-treatment of Palestinian children in the Israeli military detention system appears to be widespread, systematic and institutionalized,” said the report, issued by U.N. officials in Jerusalem. They urged Israel not to blindfold minors or hold them in solitary confinement, and to allow a lawyer or family member to be present during interrogations.

The Foreign Ministry said Israel would cooperate with the U.N. body, and the military was already making changes.

Israel will study the conclusions and will work to implement them through ongoing cooperation with UNICEF, whose work we value and respect,” spokesman Yigal Palmor said in a statement.

An official from Israel‘s military prosecutor’s office said most of the minors detained were above 16 years old. He said some were manipulated by militant groups into carrying out attacks. Most notably, a 17-year-old was one of the perpetrators of a stabbing attack in March 2011 that killed an entire family in a West Bank settlement. He spoke on condition of anonymity in line with military protocol.

Most children and minors — some 60 percent of those UNICEF interviewed — are ultimately charged with throwing rocks at soldiers or passing cars.

Rights activists have said Israel‘s military and police appear to use harsh tactics to deter the youths from throwing rocks again and to extract information about adult activists.

The UNICEF report said over two-thirds of all children interviewed were arrested in nighttime military operations. It said shouting soldiers often burst into homes, taking children and minors at gunpoint. Parents were not allowed to accompany them.

The alleged abuses also included interrogations without lawyers while minors were shackled, and threats of harm to the youths and their relatives. They said minors were often handcuffed and blindfolded while being transported from place to place.

Most minors were typically charged with crimes gleaned from confessions obtained during those interrogations, …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

US, other nations quietly maneuvering to rein in sprawling, inefficient UN system

By George Russell

Frustrated by the epic inefficiency, sprawling disorganization and free-spending of their money by the United Nations, a group of Western donor nations, including the U.S., has been meeting quietly to develop a strategy to rein in the world organization’s more than $20 billion a year in anti-poverty assistance – which even parts of the U.N. concede hasn’t done much to relieve poverty.

The donor group’s aim is to produce some kind of workable reform agenda for the bloated system that will actually achieve greater efficiency, less duplication and fragmentation of efforts, less corruption and a greater ability to see where their money actually goes.

So far, the would-be reformers are mostly trying to figure out how cost-efficient U.N. programs are, and what management tools the widely differing U.N. organizations can be pressed into adopting.

The U.N. organizations themselves — including such high-profile entities as the United Nations Development Program, UNICEF, the World Food Program, the World Health Organization and more than 30 others —are not invited to the meetings.

According to a document summarizing one of the closed-door sessions obtained by Fox News, the group of 17 reformer nations is aware that they have a long march ahead to reshape the chaotic U.N. system, make it more rational, or even more financially comprehensible.

The document summarizes the most recent meeting of the reformers in the Swedish capital of Stockholm last November, and also looks forward to their next strategy session, known as the Senior Level Donor Meeting on Multilateral Reform, in Berlin next April.

When queried by Fox News for information about the meeting, a spokesman for Germany‘s federal Ministry for Economic Development Cooperation merely acknowledged that the session was taking place.

According to the Stockholm document, the donor nations, which include most major Western European nations, as well as Canada, Australia and the U.S.—but not Japan—are not trying to cut costs, but rather are about “achieving more with available resources.”

In response to questions from Fox News, a spokesperson for Britain’s Department for International Development (DFID), one of the major forces behind the reform exercise, says that “U.N. agencies know that cost effectiveness is an important priority for the U.K.—it is one of the criteria DFID used to assess the value for money of U.N. agencies in the U.K.’s multilateral aid review, which we are updating later this year.”

But in rare public discussions of the exercise, participants from Britain, for example, have also pointed to recent small but significant cuts to the administrative budgets of a few of the bigger agencies, amounting to about 5 percent, as fruit of their nearly year-long efforts.

And Britain has already been more draconian than that. DFID, widely considered to be one of the most aggressively reformist of donor organizations, announced in early 2011 that it would walk out of four smaller U.N. agencies that it had found in its original multilateral aid review had contributed little “value for money” for Britain’s investment, and were ranked “poor” in terms of their impact.

When questioned by Fox News about the British statements …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

UN names new acting head for mission in Haiti

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Friday appointed a seasoned humanitarian worker to serve as Acting Special Representative for Haiti to oversee the world body’s peacekeeping mission in the Caribbean nation.

Nigel Fisher, a Canadian, replaces outgoing U.N. envoy Mariano Fernandez, who is leaving the job after 10 months. Fernandez has said he may consider a foray into politics in his native Chile.

Fisher has been Ban Ki-moon’s Deputy Special Representative for Haiti since 2010. That year, a massive earthquake struck the country, killing tens of thousands of people and leaving 1.5 million more homeless.

He joined the international organization in 1977, and has held senior positions in the U.N. Office for Project Support Services, the U.N. Mission of Support in Afghanistan and the children’s agency UNICEF. His assignments have taken him to a dozen countries in Asia, the Middle East and Africa.

As head of peacekeeping, Fisher will oversee the country’s security at a politically delicate time. Haiti this year is supposed to hold legislative and local elections, which are expected to be fraught by protests.

The U.N. peacekeeping mission in Haiti, known by its French acronym Minustah, has been in the country since 2004, when a violent rebellion ousted then-President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. The force currently is authorized to have up to 6,700 military personnel.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

UN says 210K kids need help in Syria's Homs

The U.N. children’s agency says 420,000 people — half of them children — need immediate help in Syria‘s western governorate of Homs.

UNICEF spokeswoman Marixie Mercado says the agency will now try to reach as many of those people as possible.

She told reporters Friday in Geneva that 200 of 1,500 schools in Homs were damaged by Syria‘s 22-month-old civil war, while another 65 schools shelter children and families.

The U.N. refugee agency says eight trucks delivered 15,000 blankets and 2,000 tents this week, its first winter emergency relief, to more than 10,000 people in makeshift camps in northern Syria‘s Azzas area.

The agency’s Middle East and North Africa director, Yacoub El Hillo, called it “an appalling situation” at the camps, where people need “urgent, acute and immediate” care.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

UN: Mozambique floods displace 150k, leave 38 dead

A U.N. official in flood-hit Mozambique says the world body will launch an appeal for $65 million in aid after flood waters killed 38 people.

The U.N. says more than 150,000 have been displaced by flooding in the southern African nation of Mozambique over the last several days. Marie Conselee Mukangendo, of the U.N. children’s agency UNICEF, said Tuesday the overall death toll stands at 38.

Mukangendo said the Chikahalani camp alone is holding an estimated 65,000 people but has only 28 latrines. She called the situation dire and said the U.N. would appeal for $65 million in relief aid on Wednesday.

Mozambique suffered record floods in 2000 that killed more than 700 people.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Groups seek $716m for Yemen humanitarian crisis

Yemen‘s government and international donors must allocate over $700 million to help ease a deepening humanitarian crisis that includes widespread malnutrition in the Arabian peninsula’s poorest country, U.N. agencies and international aid groups said Tuesday in a joint appeal.

International donors have pledged $7.9 billion in aid for Yemen to rebuild its crumbling economy and upgrade the country’s infrastructure damaged during years of political turmoil and militant attacks. But it’s unclear how much of that money has been dedicated for more immediate needs such as ensuring clear water and reliable food and medical supplies, the groups said during a gathering in Dubai.

Relief groups said at least $716 million is needed to address the immediate humanitarian concerns.

“We’re asking the world that this be prioritized,” said the U.N. humanitarian coordinator for Yemen, Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed. “There will be no political stability in Yemen if we do not deal with the humanitarian crisis.”

Ahmed estimated that 1 million children face acute malnutrition amid ongoing violence by militant factions and instability after the end of the three-decade rule of President Ali Abdullah Saleh last year. He said 300,000 are at risk of dying from hunger, without explaining further how he came by that estimate.

Tuesday’s consolidated appeal, which included U.N. organization such as UNICEF and UNHCR, follows a World Food Program report in September that said that nearly half of the 24 million Yemenis go to bed hungry every night.

International donors — including Europe, China, the U.S. and Gulf Arab states — have promised billions to Yemen, but are also demanding that Yemeni officials hasten political and security reforms. The West and allies fear Islamist militants could exploit Yemen‘s security weakness to gain more sway over the country.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Today in History for 18th January 2013

Historical Events

1701 – Frederick I and Sophie Charlotte van Hanover crowned king/queen of Prussia
1795 – French admitted to Amsterdam without resistance
1915 – Japan issues the “Twenty-One Demands” to the Republic of China in a bid to increase its power in East Asia.
1988 – Airliner crashes in SW China, killing all 108 on board
1989 – West Indies beat Australia 2-1 to win the World Series Cup
1998 – Boston Celtics retire Robert Parrish’s #00

More Historical Events »

Famous Birthdays

1543 – Alfonso Ferrabosco, composer
1903 – Berthold Goldschmidt, German/British (opera)composer (Beatrice Cenci)
1913 – Danny Kaye, Bkln NY, UNICEF/comedian/actor (Danny Kaye Show)
1916 – Alec Coxon, cricketer (England pace bowler in one Test, 2-90 and 1-82)
1935 – Gad Yaacobi, Israeli minister (d. 2007)
1973 – Edward Jasper, defensive tackle (Philadelphia Eagles)

More Famous Birthdays »

Famous Deaths

1425 – Edmund de Mortimer, 5th Earl of March, English politician (b. 1391)
1982 – Burnet Corwin Tuthill, US composer (Laurentia), dies at 93
1990 – Melanie Appleby, rocker (Mel and Kim), dies of liver cancer at 23
1994 – Arthur Altman, songwriter, dies at 83
1997 – Neville Crump, racehorse trainer, dies at 86
2008 – John Stroger, first African-American Cook County Board President (b. 1929)

More Famous Deaths »

Source: FULL ARTICLE at HistoryOrb.Com – This Day in History

Anthony Lake, Executive Director of UNICEF, on the Best Buy in Global Health

By Skoll World Forum, Contributor Editor’s Note: In a recent in-depth interview conducted by the Skoll World Forum’s Rahim Kanani, Executive Director of UNICEF Anthony Lake discussed the urgent need to create a commodities market of life-saving medicines in the developing world, arguing that healthy children are good for business. Rahim Kanani: A number of new reports […]
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

New child soldier fears in C. African Republic

The U.N. children’s agency says it’s concerned about a growing number of children being recruited by armed groups in Central African Republic as President Francois Bozize‘s government faces a rebellion in the north.

UNICEF said Friday it has received “credible reports that rebel groups and pro-government militias are increasingly recruiting and involving children in armed conflict.”

Souleymane Diabate, UNICEF Representative for Central African Republic, said children who have become separated from their families amid the instability are at the greatest risk.

UNICEF estimates that even before the latest crisis here some 2,500 children were part of armed groups in the country long plagued by rebellions. Rebels have seized 10 towns in a month’s time.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

4 Consumer Trends That Will Drive Marketing Growth In 2013

By Dean Crutchfield, Contributor Hundreds of the world’s leading brands, from UNICEF to Coca-Colato Twitter, have created an environment in which consumers can compete to get what they want. With the advent of hybrid media intertwining mobile technology with social media and cloud-based content, four growing consumer trends have emerged that change how brands, in […]
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Utah family reportedly adopted Russian girl days before Putin signed ban

A Utah family reportedly adopted a 4-year-old Russian girl with Down syndrome just days before Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a bill banning Americans from adopting Russian children — presumably making the girl, Hazel, one of the last of those now-banned adoptions.

Heather and Jeremy Fillmore welcomed Hazel into their American Fork home only an hour before Christmas began, the Deseret News reports. It took about 11 months for the Fillmores to bring the girl home from Russia prior to her arrival at Salt Lake City International Airport.

“It’s been tough, but worth it, and to have her here and be part of our family, it’s now great,” Jeremy Fillmore told the newspaper. “We feel like we’re complete and we’re excited to have her.”

The Fillmores found Hazel through a website that advocates for children with special needs called Reece’s Rainbow Down Syndrome Adoption Ministry. She was the family’s second girl they adopted from Russia via the website. Anya, now 7, was adopted in March 2011, the newspaper reports.

Other families approved for adoption are currently undergoing a 30-day waiting period and it’s unclear how Russia‘s ban will affect those cases.

“It takes months and months to gather all the paperwork, and you turn it in to them and they are kind of on their own timetable,” Heather Fillmore told the newspaper. “We went on our first trip in May and didn’t return for court until November, and it was because the judge was on a vacation for a lot of the time.”

If the ban does goes forward, children with special needs in the country will have little hope, the Fillmores said.

“It’s just sickening,” Heather Fillmore told Deseret News. “I don’t even want to believe that it can happen because it’s very personal to us. We know many families who are in the process to go to save these children from a horrible life. It just doesn’t make any sense that the children are the ones that are suffering because of retaliation in politics.”

It was not immediately clear when Russia‘s new law would take effect, but presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov was quoted by the Interfax news agency as saying “practically, adoption stops on Jan. 1.”

Children’s rights ombudsman Pavel Astakhov said 52 children who were in the pipeline for U.S. adoption would remain in Russia.

The bill has riled Americans and Russians who claim it victimizes children to make political statements, cutting off a route out of frequently dismal orphanages for thousands.

“Our unlucky children, our orphans are suffering because they became small change in a political game between two states. This is immoral, this is cannibalism,” veteran human rights campaigner Lyudmila Alexeyeva was quoted as saying by the state news agency RIA Novosti.

Vladimir Lukin, head of the Russian Human Rights Commission and a former ambassador to Washington, said he would challenge the law in the Constitutional Court.

UNICEF estimates that there are about 740,000 children not in parental custody in Russia while about 18,000 Russians are on the waiting list to adopt a child. The U.S. is the biggest destination for adopted Russian children — more than 60,000 of them have been taken in by Americans over the past two decades.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Click for more from Deseret News.

Source: Fox US News

Putin signs bill banning Americans from adopting Russian children

In a spiteful move reminiscent of the Cold War era, Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday signed a bill banning American families from adopting Russian orphans, apparently in retaliation for U.S. criticism of his nation’s human rights record.

The law blocks dozens of Russian children expected to be adopted by American families from leaving the country and cuts off one of the main international routes for Russian children to leave often dismal orphanages. Russia is the single biggest source of adopted children in the U.S., with more than 60,000 Russian children being taken in by Americans over the past two decades.

The U.S. State Department previously expressed deep concern about the Russian measure.

Spokesman Patrick Ventrell said late last week that American families over the past two decades “have welcomed more than 60,000 Russian children into American homes.”

“The welfare of children is simply too important to be linked to political aspects of our relationship,” Ventrell said.

U.S. Ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul also said last week that the bill would “link the fate of orphaned children to unrelated political issues.”

He noted that the two nations had already struck an agreement to improve safeguards to protect adopted Russian children, and said “it is unfortunate that now the Duma has apparently decided to take away these negotiated safeguards and ignore the hard work and negotiations on both sides that went into putting this agreement together.”

The bill is retaliation for an American law that calls for sanctions against Russians deemed to be human rights violators and part of an increasingly confrontational stance by the Kremlin against the West.

Putin said U.S. authorities routinely let Americans suspected of violence toward Russian adoptees go unpunished — a clear reference to Dima Yakovlev, a Russian toddler for whom the bill is named. The child was adopted by Americans and then died in 2008 after his father left him in a car in broiling heat for hours. The father was found not guilty of involuntary manslaughter.

Putin indicated that he would endorse the measure Thursday.

“I still don’t see any reasons why I should not sign it,” he told a televised meeting. He went on to say that he intended to sign it.

UNICEF estimates that there are about 740,000 children without parental custody in Russia, while only 18,000 Russians are now waiting to adopt a child. American adoption advocates say the move sentences untold numbers of Russian kids to a childhood without loving parents.

“Over the last 20 years 60,000 children have been adopted from Russia,” said Lauren Koch, spokeswoman for the National Council for Adoption. “If this bill is enacted, this means that tens of thousands of children will languish in orphanages.

“As you know this bill is in response to a human rights bill that President Obama signed,” Koch continued. “But really what they are doing is creating another human rights issue. Those children deserve the hope and promise of a loving family.”

The U.S. State Department says it regrets the Russian Parliament‘s decision to pass the bill, saying it would prevent many children from growing up in families

Critics of the bill have left dozens of stuffed toys and candles outside the parliament’s lower and upper houses to express solidarity with Russian orphans.

Children rights ombudsman Pavel Astakhov on Wednesday said that 46 children who were about to be adopted in the United States would remain in Russia in case the bill comes into effect. On Thursday, he petitioned the president to extend the ban to other countries.

“There is huge money and questionable people involved in the semi-legal schemes of exporting children,” he tweeted.

The Associated Press contributed to this report

Source: Fox US News

Putin signs anti-US adoptions bill

President Vladimir Putin has signed a bill banning Americans from adopting Russian children.

The bill is part of the country’s increasingly confrontational stance with the West and has angered some Russians who argue it victimizes children to make a political point.

UNICEF estimates that there are about 740,000 children not in parental custody in Russia,.

The law also blocks dozens of Russian children now in the process of being adopted by American families from leaving the country. The U.S. is the biggest destination for adopted Russian children. More than 60,000 of them have been taken in by Americans over the past two decades.

It is retaliation for an American law that calls for sanctions against Russian officials deemed human rights violators.

Source: Fox US News

Putin says he will sign anti-US adoptions bill

Russian President Vladimir Putin says he will sign a controversial bill banning Americans from adopting Russian children.

Putin told a televised meeting on Thursday that he “doesn’t see any reasons” against the bill and said that he “intends to sign it” into law. The president said U.S. authorities deny access to adopted Russian children and lets Americans suspected of violence towards Russian adoptees go unpunished.

Critics say that the bill will deprive many Russian orphans of an opportunity to get a family.

The Russian parliament has voted for the bill, which is part of a larger measure by lawmakers retaliating against a recently signed U.S. law calling for sanctions against Russians deemed guilty of human rights violations.

UNICEF estimates that there are about 740,000 children without parental custody in Russia.

Source: Fox US News

Traditions in Chad harm, kill underfed children

On the day of their son’s surgery, the family woke before dawn. They saddled their horses and set out across the 12-mile-long carpet of sand to the nearest town, where they hoped the reputed doctor would cure their frail, feverish baby.

The neighboring town, almost as poor and isolated as their own, hosts a foreign-run emergency clinic for malnourished children. But that’s not where the family headed.

The doctor they chose treats patients behind a mud wall. His operating room is the sand lot that serves as his front yard. His operating table is a plastic mat lying on the dirt. His surgical tools include a screwdriver. And his remedy for malnourished children is the removal, without antiseptic or anesthesia, of their teeth and epiglottis.

That day, three other children were brought to the same traditional doctor, their parents paying up to $6 for a visit, or more than a week’s earnings. Not even a mile away, the UNICEF-funded clinic by contrast admitted just one child for its free service, delivered by trained medical professionals.

The 4:1 ratio that you see in this sandy courtyard on just one day in just one town is a microcosm of what is happening all over Chad, and it helps to explain why, despite an enormous, international intervention, malnutrition continues to soar to scandalous levels throughout the Sahel.

The world poured more than $1 billion into the band of countries just south of Africa‘s vast Sahara Desert to address hunger this year alone, according to a United Nations database. A third of that money went to Chad, where 15 percent of children are acutely malnourished, says a report by aid group Save the Children. That’s among the highest rates in Africa.

There are now 32 clinics equipped with the latest technology to halt starvation, most within a few hours’ walk of affected families. If a child makes it to one of these centers in time, the chance of survival is remarkably high.

Yet acute malnutrition is only getting worse in the Sahel, where every year, cemeteries fill up with the bodies of children who wasted away within walking distance of help.

In 2010, 55,000 children were treated for the most acute form of malnutrition in Chad. In 2011, it was 65,000. The expected caseload for 2012 is 127,300, according to the report published in June. Overall, in the eight countries in the Sahel, the number of admissions has doubled in just three years.

One reason is that families simply do not take advantage of the safety net created for them, and cling instead to traditions that can end up killing rather than healing their children.

“We try to tell them the consequences. That these are not good treatments. That if the child has diarrhea, he should go to the hospital,” says Laurent Blague, director of child protection at Chad‘s Ministry of Social Welfare. “Unfortunately, this is tradition.”

______

Eight-month-old Abdallah Lamine had been sick for a month, but it wasn’t until he started vomiting that his parents made the trip to the medicine man, Haki Hassane.

The mother rode a red horse, carrying her baby’s hot body in her lap. She could feel the fever consuming him even through her clothes.

The remedy the healer prescribes for malnourished children is the removal of the epiglottis, the tiny ball of flesh that hangs from the back of the throat, which he says “gets in the way of the food.” For fever, he prescribes the removal of the child’s teeth.

In baby Abdallah’s case he prescribed both. He grabbed the baby by one arm, placed him on the mat and pinned him down. As the child began to shriek, he dug the unwashed screwdriver into the baby’s pink gums, until four tiny teeth popped out.

The healer wiped down the holes in the child’s mouth with a corner of a ratty blanket, stained with the blood of the other children he’d treated that day. Then he handed the petrified, whimpering toddler to his stone-faced mother.

Tooth extraction and the removal of the epiglottis is common in this part of Chad. Elsewhere, the treatment for diarrhea is burning the child’s anus with a rod heated over a fire. Other treatments include draining the “bad blood,” a procedure recommended when children’s bodies swell, a sign of severe malnutrition.

Similar practices prevailed in Europe and America as late as the 18th century. The advances in world medicine since have made their way to Chad in the form of internationally-run clinics, but they continue to be seen as foreign. More than half of Chad‘s people still use traditional healers, according to a survey by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life in 2010, whose remedies can be effective for some ailments.

Malnutrition is not one of them. Already malnourished children who have their epiglottis cut can’t eat for at least a week, says health official Blague. When the child does eat, the open wound often gets infected. This worsens the malnutrition.

Because the infection can last several weeks, families believe their baby has simply contracted a different ailment. Chad‘s government has never addressed these harmful practices. The issue remains extremely sensitive, in part because the healers claim their gift came from Allah and in part because many local officials were submitted to such practices themselves when they were children, aid workers say.

Hassane says in 30 years of practice, he’s never fielded any complaints from parents whose children became sicker.

“If a child has fever or diarrhea, once he opens his mouth, I can instantly tell. If I put my finger on his gum and feel it, I can tell if it’s due to his bad teeth. Once we take out this bad tooth, the diarrhea stops,” Hassane says. “And if the child gets sick again, it’s because he had some other illnesses in his system.”

Moussa Mahamat Ali, the chief of the healers in the town of Mao, the regional capital, claims that all the children who have come to him have been cured of malnutrition.

“If the child is sick … he has yellow hair, he doesn’t eat, he’s skinny, it’s because of the bad teeth,” says the 75-year-old Ali. “This is a treatment for malnutrition. No one has ever told me that this is bad.”

______

By the time children do turn up at the United Nations-funded centers, they have already been through hell. Nearly every week, health workers here admit dangerously emaciated children with a foamy substance coming out of their mouths.

Malnutrition is the underlying cause for the deaths of 2.6 million children every year, according to a study published in the scientific journal, The Lancet. That’s a third of the global total for children’s deaths.

At the feeding center in the town of Mao, run by the French aid group Action Against Hunger, a mother has come in carrying a bundle in her arms. When she pulls back the sheet, the health workers gasp. It looks like she has brought in a skeleton.

The best predictor for the severity of malnutrition is the circumference of a child’s upper arm, the World Health Organization has found over years of responding to famines in Africa. Less than 115 millimeters indicates the child is at risk of imminent death.

This child’s arms measure just 80 millimeters around. She weighs 5.2 kilograms (11.4 pounds), slightly more than a healthy newborn. She is 3 years old.

It takes a moment for the health workers to realize that the little girl, Fatime, has been admitted before.

Fatime’s short history is a litany of the well-meant customs that get in the way of a child’s health, and possibly even her life.

She was born underweight. Women in Chad, including her mother, are discouraged from eating during pregnancy, in the hope that a small child will be easier to deliver.

Fatime’s mother stopped breastfeeding her when she became pregnant with her youngest child. She was told that pregnancy tainted her milk and could poison the child still nursing.

Zara Seid, the mother, collected the bitter chaff left over when women pound millet into flour, mixed it with water and painted it on her breasts. The bitter taste repelled the toddler, and she was weaned overnight.

Yet in a place where food is hard to come by, it meant that Fatime began her precipitous fall into undernourishment.

Malnutrition and disease work in a deadly cycle, and soon Fatime got sick with diarrhea and a fever. The lack of a proper diet weakens the immune system and makes childhood diseases more severe. The sick child then loses more weight, making recovery more difficult.

More than a year ago, Fatime’s mother brought her into the clinic.

Like many African women, though, her mother needed permission from her husband to leave her family and stay away. And she knew he was starting to get impatient.

Over the pleas of the health workers, she left the clinic only a week after she got there. And upon the advice of villagers, she went to the traditional healer, a one-day visit instead of a three-week hospital stay.

The medicine man diagnosed the child’s illness as the result of her baby teeth. He heated a blade in the fire and pulled them out.

“I thought this would bring back my daughter’s health, so I took heart from that, even if it was hard to see her in pain,” says Seid. “After we took out the bad teeth, it seemed like she was getting better. … Then she got seriously worse.”

It took the death of Fatime’s baby cousin from malnutrition for her father to finally give her mother the permission to make a second, 1.5-hour journey to the clinic.

By the time Fatime made it to the clinic the second time, she didn’t look much bigger than a fetus. Zara Seid kept her daughter wrapped in a cloth, as if embarrassed to show her body, the frightening sight of a child on the knife’s edge of starvation.

Her head is bald except for a few tufts of hair. Her mouth is infected with lesions, and stained purple with the antifungal wash the nurses use daily. When she tries to drink formula, she coughs until her tiny, doll-like chest heaves.

Her legs are insect-like, unable to hold her up. They dangle, lifeless. Her arms are no bigger than a shower rod.

Flies are attracted to her, as if she is already dead. They land on her face and crawl in and out of the corners of her eyes.

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These mistakes lead here, to a set of humps in the sand. There’s a burial ground in every village in this part of Chad, including in Djiguere, where Fatime’s cousin lies under the newest hump of sand.

The big mounds are where the adults are buried. But the majority of the piles in the cemetery are small. Some are no larger than a loaf of bread.

Fatime may or may not make it. In the week since she arrived at the feeding center, she’s gained 200 grams (7 ounces).

At home in the village, her father, Mahamat Ibrahim, says he has no regrets about having had his daughter’s teeth extracted. Bad teeth are to blame for a child not growing, he says.

“This is something that everyone here knows,” he says. “It’s only the doctors at these foreign hospitals that don’t know this. And that’s why we avoid taking our children there.”

His youngest child is five months old. In a few weeks, her baby teeth will start coming in.

If she falls sick, he plans to take her to the healer to yank them out.

Source: Fox World News