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UNICEF calls leaders to re-commit to child survival, development

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As the world marked the International World Children’s Day, UNICEF has called on global leaders to commit to doing more to fulfil children’s rights just as it asked individuals to sign a global online petition asking for ‘children to be put back on the agenda.’

Mohamed Fall, UNICEF’s Representative in Nigeria in a release said: “We want to build a world where every child is in school, safe from harm and can fulfil their potential – and nowhere is this more true than in Nigeria

“A lot has been achieved – but there is still much to do to ensure that Nigerian children benefit from advances in child’s rights. At the moment, too many children are being left behind, and we need to reach them.”

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Fall stated that irrespective of where a child is born or the socio-economic class, they should all have a fair chance to survive and fulfil their parents’ hopes and dreams for their future.

He added, “In partnership with the Nigerian government, we are determined to ensure that stronger investment will yield progress for all children in education, health – including ensuring routine immunization for all, nutrition and child protection.

“This World Children’s Day, we must recommit to children – knowing that for Nigeria to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030, we must invest in long-lasting institutional and community-based systems and policies for children’s survival, growth and development.

“Nigerian children have a huge role to play in the country’s national development. It is the generation of children growing up today who will take their place as Nigeria’s leaders tomorrow and who will be able to take further to really accelerate  the progress we make now.”

Nigeria has the world’s highest number of out-of-school children, and one of its highest rates of maternal, child and infant mortality. Diseases like pneumonia, diarrhoea, and malaria – combined with underlying malnutrition – are responsible for most of the deaths among infants and children in Nigeria.

Nigeria’s burden of stunted growth among children is the second highest in the world, with 16.5 million affected; and the burden of severe acute malnutrition is high, with an estimated 2.6 million children severely acutely malnourished.

Nigerian children experience a wide range of abuses and harmful practices. An estimated three in five children have suffered one or more forms of violence before reaching 18, with over 70 per cent experiencing multiple incidents of violence.

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