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As daily monsoon rains fill ponds and rivers across Bangladesh, a country in which a shocking 40 children drown every day, national cricket icon Shakib Al Hasan is helping parents protect their children from drowning.
In a video that has gone viral with over 22 million views on social media, UNICEF National Ambassador Shakib Al Hasan gives practical advice to parents on how to keep children safe from drowning, read a press release on Tuesday.
“If parents and communities are more aware of the risks children face near water, and teach them swimming, so many untimely deaths can be avoided each year,” said Shakib.
He asked everyone to be cognisant of mitigating the children’s risk of drowning and ensuring every child’s right to survival.
Shakib’s call to parents and communities for caution comes on World Drowning Prevention Day and against the stark reality that drowning is one of the leading causes of death for children under five years in Bangladesh, claiming the life of 14,000 children every year.
In the video tutorial, Shakib speaks about simple steps that parents can take to protect their children from drowning: keeping infants under supervision, fencing in open bodies of water, and covering large water containers.
Shakib also advises parents to teach their children to swim once they turn 6 years old.
“It is a tragedy that so many children lose their life in easily preventable drowning accidents. All of us have a responsibility to act as parents and as members of our communities,” UNICEF Representative to Bangladesh Sheldon Yett said.
WHO Representative to Bangladesh Dr Bardan Jung Rana said that the onus is on every individual to take up the responsibility of water safety in addressing the risks of drowning.
“Let us join hands, empower each other, and strive towards a world where every life is safeguarded from this preventable tragedy," he added.
The WHO ‘Global Report on Drowning: Preventing a Leading Killer’ shows that drowning mortality rates in the region are still much higher than the global average, for both men and women and in every age group.
In the Southeast Asia region, drowning has been found as the second highest cause of death for children aged 10–14 years, third for children aged 5–9 years, sixth for children aged 15–24 years, and seventh for children under 5 years, the release added.
In Bangladesh, lack of awareness and poor swimming skills place children at high risk of drowning, especially in rural areas with more open water bodies.
Low-cost solutions such as simple guidelines for families and communities, safety and swimming lessons for children, and childcare facilities for preschool children can go a long way to prevent child drowning deaths.