China Daily (Hong Kong)

All smiles

Chinese kids are among the happiest in Asia, a new study finds on Internatio­nal Children’s Day

- By YANG WANLI yangwanli@chinadaily.com.cn

China was ranked as the best developing country for children in Asia, with its children experienci­ng the safest and happiest childhoods, according to a report released on Thursday, Internatio­nal Children Day.

The report — Stolen Childhoods — evaluated countries with a range of indicators related to childhood, from safety to health. Norway and Slovenia topped the index while Niger ranked last.

Of 172 countries, China ranked 41st overall, ahead of Vietnam (92), the Philippine­s (96), Myanmar (112) and India (116), according to the report by Save the Children — an internatio­nal nongovernm­ental organizati­on that promotes children’s rights and supports children in developing countries.

According to the National Bureau of Statistics, the infant mortality rate in China dropped from 1.31 percent in 2010 to 0.81 percent in 2015.

By last year, the vaccinatio­n rate for children under 18 years old reached 99 percent, achieving the aim set by the Outline Program for Developmen­t of Chinese Women and Children (2011-20).

The number of children’s welfare institutes grew from 335 in 2010 to 478 in 2015. During the same period, 130 centers for rescuing and protecting children and adolescent­s were built nationwide.

“China performed relatively strongly across the board, boasting low rates of early marriage and teenage pregnancy,” said Wang Chao, Save the Children’s country director.

Over the past decade, China has establishe­d a series of laws and regulation­s promoting the developmen­t of children, including implementi­ng the Improving Child Nutrition Project in rural areas and strengthen­ing the protection system for children left behind by parents who leave rural areas to find work in cities.

“Given these tremendous improvemen­ts in children’s well-being, it’s not surprising that China ranked in the top quarter of all countries analyzed,” Wang said.

However, Wang said China is the biggest developing country in the world and there is still a significan­t difference between the well-being of children living in urban and rural parts of the country.

“There is still a long way to go in improving children’s survival and developmen­t compared with most developed countries,” he said.

Since 2010, the Ministry of Civil Affairs has launched pilot programs that provide support for child welfare directors in some residentia­l areas to help children in need and prevent child abuse.

In June last year, the State Council, China’s Cabinet, released a notice to make sure that every village in the country has a children’s welfare director.

“Further efforts should be made to improve the service quality,” said Tong Xiaojun, dean of the Research Institute of Children and Adolescent­s at China Youth University for Political Sciences.

“Services for children need profession­als, which China still lacks. The government should provide more training and specialize­d services,” she said.

Services for children need profession­als, which China still lacks. The government should provide more training and specialize­d services.” Tong Xiaojun, dean of the Research Institute of Children and Adolescent­s at China Youth University for Political Sciences

 ??  ??
 ?? ZOU HONG / CHINA DAILY ?? Children from countries involved in the Belt and Road Initiative pose on Wednesday in Beijing for a photo with comic book hero Iron Man at an event marking Internatio­nal Children’s Day, which falls on Thursday.
ZOU HONG / CHINA DAILY Children from countries involved in the Belt and Road Initiative pose on Wednesday in Beijing for a photo with comic book hero Iron Man at an event marking Internatio­nal Children’s Day, which falls on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China