Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Nepal children in danger of disease, death: Rights groups

- Associated Press

KATHMANDU: A shortage of medicine, fuel and other supplies has put millions of Nepalese children in danger of illness, malnourish­ment and even death, child rights groups warned.

Yet the supply crisis - hitting some of the Himalayan country’s most vulnerable - shows no signs of easing after more than two months of negotiatio­ns between the government and ethnic protesters who are blockading the southern border to demand constituti­onal change.

With thousands of cargo trucks stalled at the Indian border, Nepalese gas stations say they’ve received only 15% of regular fuel supplies. Doctors say stockpiles of lifesaving drugs including antibiotic­s and medical supplies like saline solution are at critical lows.

“The risk to children with chronic diseases is really high,” said Sumnima Tuladhar of the Kathmandu-based child rights group CWIN Nepal. With fuel shortages crippling the country’s vehicles, some parents have been unable to reach hospitals for treatment.

Children in hard-to-reach rural areas are a particular

DOCTORS SAY STOCKPILES OF LIFESAVING DRUGS, INCLUDING MEDICAL SUPPLIES, ARE AT CRITICAL LOWS

worry, especially those still living in temporary shelters after a set of devastatin­g earthquake­s in April and May destroyed tens of thousands of homes in the Himalayan country.

With schools closed due to the fuel shortage, some children are even seeking work to help their families get by, Tuladhar said.

“Children are not getting enough cooked food, and the risk of malnutriti­on among children is also high,” she said.

The United Nations’ children agency warned Monday that, as the harsh winter approaches, more than 3 million Nepalese children under the age of 5 are at risk of death or disease.

It also said a rising dependence on firewood, in place of cooking gas, was increasing indoor air pollution and raising the risk of lung diseases like pneumonia.

 ?? AP ?? A sick five-year-old girl being cared for by her grandmothe­r inside a makeshift shelter at the Chuchhepat­i Camp, Kathmandu, where the family has been living since the earthquake in April.
AP A sick five-year-old girl being cared for by her grandmothe­r inside a makeshift shelter at the Chuchhepat­i Camp, Kathmandu, where the family has been living since the earthquake in April.

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