Millennium Post

UN finds 486 million in Asia still hungry, progress stalled

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BANGKOK: Despite rapid economic growth, the Asia-pacific region has nearly a half billion people who go hungry as progress stalls in improving food security and basic living conditions, a United Nations report said Friday.

Even in relatively well-to-do cities like Bangkok and the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur, poor families cannot afford enough good food for their children, often with devastatin­g long-term consequenc­es for their health and future productivi­ty, says the report compiled by the Food and Agricultur­al Organisati­on and three other UN agencies.

In Bangkok, more than a third of children were not receiving an adequate diet as of 2017, the report said.

In Pakistan only 4 per cent of children were getting a "minimally acceptable diet," it said, citing a government survey.

To be able to meet a goal of reaching zero hunger in the region by 2030, 110,000 people need to be lifted out of hunger and malnutriti­on every single day, said the FAO'S regional director-general, Kundhavi Kadiresan.

"After all those years of gains in fighting hunger and malnutriti­on in Asia and the Pacific we now find ourselves at a virtual standstill," she said.

"We have to pick up the pace." Meanwhile, the number of malnourish­ed people in the region has begun to rise, especially in East and Southeast Asia, with almost no improvemen­t in the past several years.

In the longer term, rates of malnutriti­on did fall from nearly 18 per cent in 2005 to 11 per cent in 2017, but hunger-related stunting that causes permanent impairment is worsening due to food insecurity and inadequate sanitation, with 79 million children younger than 5 across the region affected, the report said. FOR FURTHER INFORMATIO­N KINDLY VISIT : www.haryanaepr­ocurement. gov.in or www.etenders.hry.nic.inmunicipa­l Corporatio­n

RO No. PRDH-ADVT. No:-11/1819/512000/73283

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