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UNICEF Says Two Out Of Five Children In Central African Republic Without Vital Aid

UNICEF Says Two Out Of Five Children In Central African Republic Without Vital Aid

From UN

Two out of five children urgently needing humanitarian aid in Central African Republic are without it, thanks to a critical lack of funding and continued conflict, a year after extreme violence tore through the country, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has said.

“Children in the Central African Republic (CAR) are no longer making headlines, but over 2.5 million of them continue to live in constant fear,” said Manuel Fontaine, UNICEF Regional Director for West and Central Africa. “They have little access to essential services and rely entirely on humanitarian aid. As we prepare to mark the New Year, we must seize the chance to give these children a better future.”

The Agency received less than half of the emergency funding it required for 2014, while humanitarian access remains poor due to continued insecurity, with road barricades, looting and attacks against aid workers, hampering UNICEF’s efforts to deliver vital life-saving assistance to communities in need.

Communities the agency expected to help this year have been left without access to basic services, with 620,000 people unable to receive basic healthcare and medicines, 250,000 unable to access improved sources of water, 33,000 children went unvaccinated against measles and 5,000 severely malnourished children under-five not treated.

Nonetheless, working with local authorities and partners, UNICEF was able to make life-saving services, like medicines, vaccinations, mosquito nets and therapy for malnourished children, accessible to thousands of families in need.

 

Read more at UN