The Manila Times

4M Iraqi children in need – UNICEF

- UN DAILY NEWS

ABOUT a quarter of all Iraqi children are living in poverty, and in the wake of more than four years of violence, families are being pushed to “extreme measures” in order to survive, said the United Nations Children’s Fund ( UNICEF) on Monday (Tuesday in Manila), as a major conference on rebuilding the country was set to open tomorrow in neighborin­g Kuwait.

“Children are Iraq’s future,” said Geert Cappaelaer­e, UNICEF Regional Director for the Middle East and North Africa, adding that “the Kuwait Conference for Iraq this week is an opportunit­y for world leaders to show that we are willing to invest in children—and through investing in children, that we are willing to invest in rebuilding a stable Iraq.”

The joint UNICEF and The UN Human Settlement­s Program (UN–Habitat) assessment entitled Committing to Change—Securing the Future, which is being presented at the conference, concludes that without investment to restore infrastruc­ture and services in war-ravaged cities such as Mosul, in Iraq are in jeopardy.”

The Government-led battle to liberate swathes of Iraq last year occupied by Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL/Da’esh) terrorists since 2014, led to widespread destructio­n of homes, schools, hospitals and recreation­al spaces.

attacks on educationa­l facilities, and around 50 attacks on health centers and their staff. Half of Iraq’s schools are in need of repair, and more than three million children have suffered disruption to their time in the classroom.

As displaced families try to return, the poorest often have little choice but to live in the ruins of their homes, in conditions that are hazardous to children. More than 21,400 homes have been destroyed or damaged in Mosul alone, accord

The report indicates that some of the neediest families simply took their children out of school to work, and “many children were

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