‘Staggering’ 347 million children facing water scarcity in South Asia: UN

It’s the highest number among all regions in the world, the UN children’s agency says.

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Women and children carry containers after filling them with water at an abandoned stone quarry in Chipiya Abhaypur village of the northern state of Uttar Pradesh [File: Ritesh Shukla/Reuters]

More children in South Asia are struggling due to severe water scarcity made worse by the effects of climate change than anywhere else worldwide, the United Nations says.

“A staggering 347 million children under 18 are exposed to high or extremely high water scarcity in South Asia, the highest number among all regions in the world,” the UN Children’s Agency said in a report on Monday.

The eight-nation region, comprising Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, Maldives, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, is home to more than one-quarter of the world’s children.

“Climate change is disrupting weather patterns and rainfall, leading to unpredictable water availability,” the UNICEF said in its report.

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Homeless children walk along a road to collect water for their families in Mumbai [File: Danish Siddiqui/Reuters]

The report cites poor water quality, lack of water and mismanagement such as overpumping of aquifers, adding that climate change decreases the amount of water replenishing them.

“When village wells go dry, homes, health centres and schools are all affected,” UNICEF added. “With an increasingly unpredictable climate, water scarcity is expected to become worse for children in South Asia.”

At the UN COP28 climate conference next month in Dubai, UNICEF said it will call for leaders “to secure a livable planet”.

“Safe water is a basic human right,” said Sanjay Wijesekera, UNICEF chief for South Asia.

“Yet millions of children in South Asia don’t have enough to drink in a region plagued by floods, droughts and other extreme weather events, triggered increasingly by climate change.”

Last year, 45 million children lacked access to basic drinking water services in South Asia, more than any other region, but UNICEF said services were expanding rapidly, with that number slated to be halved by 2030.

Behind South Asia were Eastern and Southern Africa regions, where 130 million children are at risk from severe water scarcity, the report added.

Source: News Agencies

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