Source: Save The Children
RISING ACUTE MALNUTRITION IN DRC PUTS 4.5 MILLION CHILDREN AGED UNDER FIVE AT GREATER RISK OF MPOX
Source: Save The Children
KINSHASA, 10 Sept 2024 – Increased rates of acute malnutrition in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has put 4.5 million children aged under five and over 3.7 million pregnant and breastfeeding women at heightened risk of contracting and dying of mpox, Save the Children said.
The latest figures on malnutrition from the Integrated Phase Classification (IPC) – the leading international authority on food insecurity – come as DRC is at the epicentre of an outbreak of a new strain of mpox that has so far killed at least 632 people, adding further pressures to a country where about a quarter of the population are in need of humanitarian assistance [1].
Greg Ramm, Country Director for Save the Children in the DRC, said:
“These grave new figures add extra urgency to the critical need to prevent the spread of mpox and other diseases across the DRC. We know from decades of experience that malnutrition weakens immune systems, making it harder to fight off disease and more likely that children die from conditions such as diarrhoea. We know from just the past few months that malnourished children across the country, living with poor sanitation and healthcare, are contracting and dying of mpox at a far higher rate than adults. This new variant exacerbates challenges caused by conflict, displacement and poverty that many families are already facing.
“We are now at a crossroads – do we let this deadly mpox virus spread and cause a catastrophe among children, knowing what we know? Or do we use this knowledge to act urgently to prevent the spread of the virus, to treat children, strengthen the country’s health systems and water, sanitation and hygiene services and protect children and families?
“For several years now, the country has had some of the world’s worst rates of hunger and malnutrition. For far too long the world has let down children in DRC. It’s time for donors and agencies to step up to protect them.”
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[1] 25.4 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance, according to OCHA. Latest UN figures show DRC has a population of 99 million
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STATEMENT: IN SYRIA CHILDREN LOSING THEIR FUTURES AS VIOLENCE ESCALATES
Source: Save The Children
AMMAN, 10 Sept 2024 – Rasha Muhrez, Save the Children Response Director in Syria, said:
“Children are paying the highest price for the ongoing conflict in Syria with the latest series of strikes across southern and central Syria – in which at least 24 people including civilians were reportedly killed – again highlighting the risks to their lives, their futures and their families.
“Recent attacks across Syria have killed and injured children, destroyed vital civilian infrastructure like electricity and water stations, schools and hospitals. Whether it’s due to regional escalations, tensions across Syria’s northern border, or the ongoing conflict inside the country – children are suffering the most.
“Services have already collapsed after 14 years of conflict and basic systems have limited capacity to respond to shocks. Syrians seek a return to some sense of normalcy and a better future for their children.
“The humanitarian crisis in Syria is at a record levels. Over 16 million people – almost half of them children – need urgent assistance, the highest figure since Syria’s conflict began. This violence is only worsening an already disastrous crisis.
“International humanitarian law demands that all parties to the conflict ensure the protection of civilians and civilian infrastructure. The continued escalation of violence only deepens the crisis for Syria’s most vulnerable, who are already enduring unimaginable hardship. We call on all involved to prioritise the safety of civilians .”
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“Delete the Children” campaign launched in South Korea as schools face sexually explicit AI ‘deepfakes’ crisis
Source: Save The Children
WEST AFRICA FLOODS: Nearly 950,000 people displaced and children sheltering in schools just weeks before school term starts
Source: Save The Children
ABUJA, BAMAKO, NIAMEY, 6 September 2024 – Recent heavy rains and floods across West Africa have forced nearly 950,000 people [1], many of them children, from their homes across Mali, Nigeria and Niger, Save the Children said.
The hundreds of thousands of children now displaced from their homes are facing disease, hunger from crop destruction, and disruption to their education, as schools have become crowded with fleeing families or damaged in the floods.
While this is normally the rainiest time of the year in the region, this year’s rains have been more severe than usual, causing widespread flood damage to four regions (Bamako, Ségou, Koulikoro, and Gao) of Mali, the northern states of Nigeria and the Maradi region of Niger. These kinds of extreme weather events are becoming more frequent and severe as a result of the climate crisis, said Save the Children.
In Mali, where the government has declared a national state of disaster, the floods have forced 73,778 people including 32,889 children from their homes [2], many of whom are seeking shelter in schools, risking a delay to the school term which is scheduled to start in October.
Rama*, 11, from Mali told Save the Children: “We came to live in the school because of the flood that destroyed all our house as well as everything we owned: our farmyard, our clothes, our kitchen utensils, our food, especially my sister’s school supplies as well as our pretty doll that I loved very much.
“We sleep in a school with some neighbouring families who have also been affected, but there are also other families and many people I don’t know. I’m separated from my best friends in the neighbourhood, and I haven’t even heard from some for days. With the reopening of schools, we have no shelters, my grandmother is already worried that we will be chased away from the school. I don’t know yet if I will continue school this year because we lost everything in the water. I don’t think my parents will have the means to support me at school”.
In Nigeria, flooding has affected 29 of the country’s 36 states – four-fifths of the country – mostly in the northern areas. The torrential rainfall has led to the overflowing of dams and rising water levels of the two largest rivers, the Niger and the Benue, resulting in the death of over 200 people including children [3]. On top of those killed, more than 225,000 have been displaced from their homes across the country, while more than 2,100 have been injured [3].
According to Nigerian government data [4], over 115,265 hectares of farmland have also been damaged, in a country with already high rates of food insecurity. Save the Children recently estimated that one in every six children across Nigeria faced hunger in June-August this year – a 25% increase on the same period last year.
In Niger, flooding has affected all 8 regions of the country, with torrential rains and floods beginning in May washing away houses and destroying buildings, bridges and roads. At least 265 people have been killed [5] and children remain at risk of drowning, waterborne diseases and electrocution from exposed wires, Maradi , Zinder, and Tahoua (in southern Niger) have experienced the greatest devastation in terms of affected people and damaged houses, said Save the Children. As of 2 September, the official government figures on floods countrywide show 85 260 affected households (649 184 individuals) including 68 955 destroyed houses and 110 damaged classrooms [5].
Vishna Shah-Little, Regional Director of Advocacy, Communications, Campaigns and Media for Save the Children in West and Central Africa said:
“We expected this was coming with the rainy season – but this level of destruction is something else, and could have been avoided if action was taken sooner.
“These countries are already ravaged by conflict and insecurity, making it even harder to respond – it is critical that support gets to those who need it in a timely manner to prevent things from getting worse. And we need to see urgent, bold action on climate change from the global level as its impact on children becomes more and more visible.”
Save the Children is actively responding to flood victims’ needs in the Segou region of Mali through food security programs, cash transfers, the provision of water, hygiene and sanitation services, and child protection activities. The Segou region is the most affected in Mali, with 15,656 children affected, constituting about 51 per cent of the total affected children population.
In Nigeria, Save the Children is responding in Adamawa state, distributing foldable mattresses, blankets, and hygiene and sanitation products to the most vulnerable flood-affected households including children and the elderly.
In the global response to the climate crisis, Save the Children is calling for national governments to rapidly phase out the use and subsidy of fossil fuels and ensure a just and equitable transition in order to limit warming temperatures to 1.5 degrees C above pre-industrial levels.
Leaders must also include the voices, needs and rights of children, particularly those affected by inequality and discrimination, in the global response to climate change, including in climate finance from higher-income countries to lower-income countries. At a practical level, this includes ensuring buildings like schools are more resilient to extreme weather events such as flooding so that children can learn safely.
Around the world, Save the Children works to create lasting change with and for children by supporting communities to strengthen their resilience to the climate crisis and calling on world leaders to tackle its root causes.
*name has been changed to protect anonymity
Notes:
- Total number of the reported displaced people in Mali (73,778), Nigeria (225,000) and Niger (649 184) according to the official document released by the countries’ emergency agencies in September
- National Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction in Mali Flooding reports released on September 2024
- Official figures released by Nigeria’s National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) on 3 September, 2024
- Official figures released by Nigeria’s National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) on 3 September, 2024
- Official figures released by MINISTERE DE L’ACTION HUMANITAIRE ET DE LA GESTION DES CATASTROPHES – REPUBLIQUE DU NIGER on September 4, 2024
Sudan: Major cholera outbreak as heavy rains hit displacement camps and no end to fighting
Source: Save The Children
PORT SUDAN, 5 Sept 2024 – Thousands of children in eastern Sudan are at risk of cholera following a major outbreak caused by widespread flooding, contaminated water and with a decimated health system after 16 months of conflict, Save the Children said.
Nearly 2900 cases of cholera and 112 deaths have been reported between July 22 and the beginning of September with Sudan’s Ministry of Health officially declared the outbreak on August 12. However, the actual numbers may be higher as limited access to health facilities and delayed community referrals are leading to a significant underreporting, according to the latest report from Sudan’s Health Cluster— a partnership including the UN, the Federal Ministry of Health, and NGOs including Save the Children.
In El Damer in River Nile State and in Gedarif in Gedarif State, Save the Children teams are reporting a huge spike in cholera cases among children under five, who account for nearly 15% of the confirmed cases and deaths across the country.
The spike in cholera comes with no end to the fighting that started in April last year and has devastated the country’s health and sanitation systems. Cholera spreads rapidly due to inadequate sewage treatment, flooding, and unsafe drinking water—conditions worsened by relentless heavy rains that have battered much of the country for the past three months.
The flooding has already claimed at least 173 lives and injured 505 people since June, according to the National Council for Civil Defence. The downpour has also caused the collapse of the Arbaat Dam in Red Sea state on 24 August, which is the main source of drinking water for the coastal city of Port Sudan, a vital humanitarian hub.
Heavy rains and flooding have also displaced 4,300 people from displacement camps in North Darfur State, including the Zamzam camp, where famine was recently declared. The flooding has destroyed around 900 tents and washed away latrines within these camps, severely disrupting humanitarian aid efforts.
With more than 25.6 million people across the country in need of aid, the crisis has escalated food scarcity, putting children at heightened risk of malnutrition.
Mohamed Abdiladif, Interim Country Director for Save the Children in Sudan, said:
“Children in Sudan have gone from horror to horror. Even before the conflict erupted last year the country was home to one of the world’s biggest humanitarian crises, with existing localised conflicts, natural disasters, disease outbreaks and economic degradation leaving 15.8 million people in need. That figure has now escalated to 25.6 million people, and diseases like cholera will only trigger a greater increase. Conflict is not just about immediate violence but is also a slow but deadly drip-feed of other grave threats to children’s lives, such as malnutrition and disease.
“We are working to ensure access to clean water, sanitation facilities, and hygiene promotion activities to prevent the spread of waterborne diseases such as a cholera in conflict-affected areas. However, we urgently need a huge injection of funds to deliver the treatment needed for cholera.”
Save the Children is conducting daily water quality testing, monitoring and chlorination at 35 water sources within the Sawakin locality, Red Sea state, and has disposed of 125 tons of solid waste at designated dumping sites.
In Gedaref state, Save the Children is supporting with treatment and management of cholera cases and providing safe drinking water to cholera treatment centres. The aid agency is also providing cash assistance to vulnerable families to enable them buy basics such as food, water, and afford health care.
Save the Children has worked in Sudan since 1983 and is currently supporting children and their families across Sudan providing health, nutrition, education, child protection and food security and livelihoods support. Save the Children is also supporting refugees from Sudan in Egypt and South Sudan.
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STATEMENT: BABY AMONG THOSE KILLED IN DEADLY ATTACKS IN UKRAINE
Source: Save The Children
Sonia Khush, Save the Children Country Director in Ukraine, said:
“The strike in Lviv – where three children including a baby were reportedly killed – proves once again, that even far away from the frontline children can never be truly safe from attacks. So far, every single day of September has been marred by air strikes, and dozens of children have been killed or injured in deadly explosions.
“Instead of morning alarms that would wake them to go to school, children are startled awake by air raid sirens and forced into shelters straight out of bed. Instead of learning and playing, children are being killed, injured, and left emotionally distressed. Three in four children in Ukraine are living in constant fear amid an escalating mental health crisis.
“As there are no signs of attacks slowing, children are paying the highest price. We must no longer tolerate violence against the most vulnerable of human beings. International humanitarian law should be the cornerstone that everybody abides by to ensure children, their families, and homes are protected from shelling and strikes.”
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For further enquiries please contact:
Pakistan: Over half of flood-related deaths are children as heavy rains displace thousands
Source: Save The Children
ISLAMABAD, 4 September 2024 – Floods and heavy rains have killed more than 150 children in Pakistan since the start of the monsoon season in July, making up over half of all deaths, said Save the Children [1].
Over 200 children have been injured in incidents caused by rain or floods, which have forced thousands of people from their homes. In Sanghar district in Sindh province, nearly 10,000 people have been displaced after a canal overflowed. About 2,600 are now living in a relief camp in a school – 60% of them are children – with others living in the open next to their destroyed or damaged homes [2].
A Save the Children assessment in the most flood affected parts of Sanghar found a severe shortage of clean water, with many sources contaminated by human and animal excrement. Some villages in Sanghar are still cut off by snake infested floodwaters and only accessible by boat. More than nine out of 10 people surveyed said that mosquito transmitted diseases, such as malaria and dengue, are their biggest health concerns, with 75% worried about water borne diseases, like diarrhoea [3].
Three quarters of people assessed said they were selling household assets to buy food. The rains and floods have destroyed 80% of cotton crops in Sanghar, the primary source of income for farmers, and killed hundreds of livestock.
Girls in Sanghar told Save the Children that personal safety and security was their top concern in the aftermath of the floods, with some worried about a potential increase in gender-based violence.
Aisha* said:
“We need food, water, and a safe place to sleep. My school is flooded, so we can’t go to class. I miss playing with my friends. I hope the flood goes away soon.”
Save the Children is working with a local partner, HANDS, to support children and adults affected by the floods in Sanghar. The child rights organisation is providing items including tents, household and hygiene kits for displaced families and has deployed mobile health and nutrition teams to deliver primary healthcare and screen children for malnutrition. Children in Sanghar will also have dedicated safe spaces where they can continue to learn through play based activities and receive mental health support. Save the Children plans to expand its response to other areas in Sindh and Balochistan, which need urgent assistance.
Khuram Gondal, Country Director, Save the Children in Pakistan said:
“Children are always the most affected in a disaster. Families have yet again lost homes and livelihoods – some of the same areas that were hit by devastating floods just two years ago are again under water. Children need urgent assistance – they need clean water, protection from mosquito borne diseases and safe spaces where they can play and learn.
“We need to ensure that the immediate impacts of the floods and heavy rains do not become long term problems. In Sindh province alone, more than 72,000 children have seen their education disrupted [4]. Governments must tackle the underlying causes of these climate driven disasters, including channeling funding and support to children and their families in Pakistan to adapt, recover and rebuild their lives.”
Save the Children has been working in Pakistan since 1979 and was the first international NGO to respond to the 2022 floods emergency. As of the end of July 2024, the child rights organisation has reached more than 1.1 million people in flood-affected areas, including more than 568,000 children.
We have programmes addressing children’s needs for food security, education, health, nutrition, water, sanitation and hygiene. In Sindh province, Save the Children continues to support affected families through the distribution of cash, health and nutrition treatment and livelihood recovery programmes.
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Notes to editors:
*denotes name changed to protect identity
[1] Figures correct as of 1 September 2024 https://reliefweb.int/report/pakistan/ndma-monsoon-2024-daily-situation-report-no-63-1-september-2024
[2] UN OCHA Joint Observatory Mission-District Sanghar, 21 August 2024
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UNIQLO AND MAGNUM PHOTOS LAUNCH GLOBAL EXHIBITION CAPTURING LIVES OF CHILDREN IN CONFLICT AND CRISIS
Source: Save The Children
Refugee children from Ukraine play together at a Save the Children Counselling Hub. Bucharest, Romania, December 2023. Credit: Olivia Arthur/MAGNUM PHOTOS
LONDON/STOCKHOLM/TOKYO/ROME, 3 SEPTEMBER 2024 – A powerful new photography exhibition documenting the lives of children experiencing conflict and crisis from Ukraine, Vietnam and Ethiopia opens this month and will run in 10 countries.
Global apparel retailer UNIQLO has collaborated with internationally renowned photographic cooperative Magnum Photos on a collection of 63 images highlighting the real lives of children and adults who have faced adversity, such as war, displacement and child-marriage.
The people photographed have all been supported by UNIQLO’s PEACE FOR ALL charity T-shirt project, which donates proceeds to the humanitarian and development work of Save the Children, UNHCR, and Plan International.
A new collection of PEACE FOR ALL charity T-shirts will launch on 19 September 2024, with all of the designs expressing a wish for peace.
Conflicts and crises take a devastating toll on children, who are more vulnerable to illness and disease and often face an increased risk of exploitation and abuse. Children who have fled conflicts and crises are also at risk, as their education is disrupted, and their mental health can suffer.
Magnum photographer Olivia Arthur visited Save the Children’s counselling hub in Bucharest, Romania, last December for the project. The hub offers children displaced by the ongoing conflict in Ukraine the opportunity to participate in educational and other activities.
Liubov*, 10, who attends Save the Children’s counselling hub in Bucharest, said:
“In the ‘Save the Children’ sessions, I feel safe and joyful like a child. I enjoy participating in games, learning new things, and spending time with other kids who speak my language.”
Vladymir*, 8, also attends the Hub, he said:
“During the ‘Save the Children’ sessions, I feel inspired and happy because I come here with my friends.”
Save the Children Romania has set up eight counselling hubs across the country, providing a range of services for refugees including counselling, child protection, education, mental health and psychosocial support activities.
Olivia Arthur captured the lives of children as they attended Romanian & English language classes, afterschool classes, creativity classes, and therapy with dogs, she said:
“The most powerful tool that children have is their imagination, so I wanted to create a space where these children could come and express themselves and play with whatever came into their heads. There was a lot of giggling and some inventive creatures and poses.”
Federica Toscano, Senior Advocacy Advisor, Children on the Move, Save the Children Europe, said:
“The ongoing conflict in Ukraine has forced countless children to leave behind everything they know. In times of crisis, providing not just shelter but also emotional and educational support is crucial for their well-being and future. Save the Children’s counselling hubs offer a safe space where children can heal, learn, and rediscover a sense of normalcy.”
UNIQLO and Save the Children have been working together since 2022, through the PEACE FOR ALL initiative. Supporting children globally affected by conflict and emergencies.
Notes
*Names changed to protect anonymity
Media spokespeople available on request, pelase contact ruby.wright@savethechildren.org.
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Exhibitions
UK, London, Kings Cross, 13 September – 31 October 2024
Vietnam, Hanoi, Hanoi Information and Exhibition Centre, 18 September – 22 September 2024
US, New York, UNIQLO 5th Avenue, 19 September to 31 October 2024
Sweden, Stockholm, Kings Garden, 19 September – 13 October 2024
Taiwan, Taipei, UNIQLO Taipei, 20 September – 3- October 2024
Singapore, Vivo City, 20 September – 4 October 2024
Japan, Tokyo, UN University, 19 September – 23 September 2024
Korea, Seoul, DRC Hongdae, 21 September – 25 September 2024
Italy, Rome, Galleria Alberto Sordi, 21 September – 11 October 2024
Malaysia, Petaling Jaya, Sunway University, 23 September – 25 September 2024
UNIQLO launched the PEACE FOR ALL project on 17 June 2022, and to date has featured designs from 38 collaborators (including this most recent collection). As of July 2024, more than 5 million T-shirts have been sold worldwide, raising more than JPY 1.5 billion (approx. US$10 million). UNIQLO parent company Fast Retailing contributes 100% of profits from the sale of these T shirts (equivalent to 20% of the selling price) to three international aid organisations, UNHCR, Save the Children, and Plan International Inc., which aid people impacted by poverty, discrimination, violence, and conflict.
DRC: Child mpox cases surge 75-fold in worst hit province as schools restart this week
Source: Save The Children