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POST TIME: 6 April, 2019 12:39:29 AM / LAST MODIFIED: 6 April, 2019 08:22:47 AM
Future of 19 million children in Bangladesh at risk: UNICEF
Climate Change impact
STAFF REPORTER, Dhaka

Future of 19 million children in 
Bangladesh at risk: UNICEF

Devastating floods, cyclones and other environmental disasters linked to climate change are threatening the lives and future of more than 19 million children in Bangladesh, UNICEF said yesterday. In a new report, UNICEF says that while Bangladeshis have developed admirable powers of resilience, more resources and innovative programmes are urgently needed to avert the danger that climate change poses to the country’s youngest citizens.

“Climate change is deepening the environmental threat faced by families in Bangladesh’s poorest communities, leaving them unable to keep their children properly housed, fed, healthy and educated,” said UNICEF executive director Henrietta Fore, who visited Bangladesh in early March 2019.

“In Bangladesh and around the world, climate change has the potential to reverse many of the gains that countries have achieved in child survival and development,” she added.

The new UNICEF report, ‘A Gathering Storm: Climate change clouds the future of children in Bangladesh’, points out that Bangladesh’s flat topography, dense population and weak infrastructure make the country uniquely vulnerable to the powerful and unpredictable forces that climate change is compounding. The threat is felt from the flood and drought-prone lowlands in the country’s northern regions to its storm-ravaged coastline along the Bay of Bengal.

Drawing on interviews with families, community leaders and officials, UNICEF says that a combination of extreme weather events, such as flooding, storm surges, cyclones and droughts, and longer-term phenomena directly related to climate change, are forcing families deeper into poverty and displacement. In the process, children’s access to education and health services is severely being disrupted.

Around 12 million of the most affected children live in and around the powerful river systems which flow through Bangladesh and regularly burst their banks. The most recent major flooding of the Brahmaputra river in 2017 inundated at least 480 community health clinics and damaged some 50,000 tube wells, essential for meeting communities’ safe water needs.

Another 4.5 million children live in coastal areas regularly struck by powerful cyclones, including almost half a million Rohingya refugee children living in fragile bamboo and plastic shelters.

A further three million children live further inland, where farming communities suffer increasing periods of drought. The report says that climate change is a key factor pushing poorer Bangladeshis to abandon their homes and communities and to try and rebuild

lives elsewhere. Many head to Dhaka and other major cities, where they risk being pushed into dangerous forms of labour and early marriages. It also cites research showing that Bangladesh has six million climate migrants already, a number that can more than double by 2050.

“When families migrate from their homes in the countryside because of climate change, children effectively lose their childhoods,” said UNICEF Bangladesh representative Edouard Beigbeder.

“They face danger and deprivation in cities, as well as pressure to go out to work despite the risk of exploitation and abuse,” he added.

UNICEF points out that since the early 1990s, investment and action—both in disaster preparedness and risk reduction programmes— have made vulnerable communities in Bangladesh more resilient to the dangers of climatic shock. For instance, there has been a dramatic reduction in the mortality rate caused by cyclones over recent decades.

The report calls on the international community and other partners to support the government in implementing a range of initiatives to shield children from the effects of climate change. One example is a technology being promoted by UNICEF and other partners that would help coastal communities protect their vital supplies of drinking water against the intrusion of salt water from the sea.

The system, known as Managed Aquifer Recharge, is already working in around 75 communities.


IK/SI