Children killed by unsafe water, more than bullets, UNICEF
UNICEF’s 16-nation study into how water supplies
effect children caught up in emergencies, also shows that children under-five
are on average more than 20 times more likely to die from illnesses linked to
unsafe water and bad sanitation, than from conflict.
“The odds are already stacked against children
living through prolonged conflicts – with many unable to reach a safe water
source,” said UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore. “The reality is that
there are more children who die from lack of access to safe water than by
bullets."
According to the report, every year, 85,700 children
under-15 die from diarrhoea linked to unsafe water, sanitation and hygiene
facilities (WASH), compared with 30,900 from conflict.
Some 72,000 under-fives die annually from similar
illnesses linked to WASH-access problems, compared to 3,400 from war-related
violence.
UNICEF studied data from Afghanistan, Burkina Faso,
Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Chad, the Democratic Republic of the
Congo, Ethiopia, Iraq, Libya, Mali, Myanmar, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria
and Yemen.
It compared World Health Organization (WHO)
mortality estimates for “collective violence” and “diarrhoeal disease”.
On average, mortality estimates were higher for
diarrhoeal disease than violence in under 15-year-olds – except in Libya, Iraq
and Syria.
Under-fives were more likely to die from diarrhoeal
disease in all countries except Libya and Syria, the UN report found.
Hundreds of millions of youngsters live in areas
afflicted by war, the UN agency said, noting that more countries are now
embroiled internally and internationally than at any time in the past 30 years.
It highlights the fact that children “are always
among the most vulnerable” and face a multitude of threats linked to a lack of
safe water, sanitation and hygiene services.
These include malnutrition and preventable diseases
including diarrhoea, typhoid, cholera and polio.
Girls especially vulnerable to
sexual violence
Girls are particularly affected, UNICEF insists,
warning that they face becoming victims of sexual violence as they collect
water, or venture out to use latrines.
In addition, they struggle to manage menstrual
hygiene and miss lessons during menstruation, if their schools have no suitable
water and sanitation facilities, UNICEF notes.
Another consequence of armed conflict that people
face is limited access to essential equipment and consumables, such as fuel or
chlorine. These can be “depleted, rationed, diverted or blocked from delivery”,
the agency noted earlier this year.
“Far too often, essential services are intentionally
denied,” UNICEF said, citing how attacks on water networks “cut services for
weeks at a time, forcing children to fetch water in extreme temperatures”.
As an example of the dangers faced, during a water
crisis in Aleppo in the summer of 2015, three children were killed as they
collected water for their families, the report noted.
Helping displaced Syrians near former ISIL
stronghold
Today, the agency helps displaced Syrians by
delivering trucked water to camps, including those near Raqqa, former bastion
of the ISIL terrorist network.
Among those who have benefited is 12-year-old
Horriya, who along with her family, made a three-day journey from Raqqa in 2017
to escape violence.
“I wasn’t afraid on the way,” Horriya says in the
report. “We heard airplanes and shelling, but we’re used to that. We see them
and hear them every day.”
UNICEF has also installed latrines, showers and
water storage tanks in the camps and distributed family hygiene kits to protect
children against waterborne diseases in camps including around Raqqa.
In 2018, UNICEF provided 35.3 million people with
access to safe water for drinking, cooking and personal hygiene.