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Summary: Child Alert is a briefing series that presents the core challenges for children in a given crisis location at a given time. Haiti is the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere and has the highest death rate of under-5-year-olds. A recent election may provide the stability necesssary to improve the situation for children in Haiti, but the world must continue and increase efforts to give these children hope for their futures.
[MONTREAL / MADRID, 22 MARCH, 2006] – Children born in Haiti are more likely to die during early childhood than in any other country in the Western Hemisphere, according to ‘Child Alert: Haiti’, a report released by UNICEF today. “There are few more challenging places to have a healthy childhood than Haiti,”said Adriano González-Regueral, UNICEF’s Country Representative in Haiti. “While Haiti accounts for only two percent of births in Latin America and the Caribbean it accounts for 19% of deaths for children under five. It has by far the highest death rates for children under five, with 117 children dying for every 1,000 births.” ‘Child Alert: Haiti’, the second in a series of papers presenting the core challenges for children in a particular crisis location, reports that thousands of Haiti’s children lead lives of daily struggle. In rural areas, children lack even the most basic services, often walking for hours just to reach the nearest health centre or water source. In Haiti’s cities, violence and abuse lock children in a cycle that is almost impossible to break. “We applaud the public commitment of President-elect René Preval to improving the lives of Haiti’s children,” said González-Regueral. “Political leadership can bring the types of changes needed so that a good, basic education and decent health care is not a matter of good fortune for a child, but is instead a common standard.” ‘Child Alert: Haiti’ details the threats to the health and well-being of Haiti’s children: For further information, please contact: Susan Lagana, [email protected], UNICEF Media, New York (1)212 326 7516
Gordon Weiss, [email protected], UNICEF Media, New York (1)212 326 7426