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Bangladesh improves in children's rights index

AFP . The Hague
19 Oct 2022 12:53:42 | Update: 19 Oct 2022 14:21:11
Bangladesh improves in children's rights index
An index published by KidsRights shows that Bangladesh improved significantly in the children's rights index — Collected Photo

Bangladesh has recently shown a significant improvement in the children's rights index, according to a report by The KidsRights - an international children's aid and advocacy organisation based in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.  

The report was jointly prepared by The KidsRights and Erasmus University Rotterdam.

The report also said around one billion children are at extremely high risk due to climate change adding that youths' living standards failed to improve in the last decade.

The KidsRights index, based on figures supplied by UN agencies, states that more than one-third of the world's children, some 820 million, were currently exposed to heatwaves.

Water scarcity affected 920 million children worldwide, while diseases such as malaria and dengue affected some 600 million children or one in every four, the Dutch NGO said.

This is the first and only ranking that measures how children's rights are respected annually, ranking Iceland, Sweden, and Finland as the best for children's rights and Sierra Leone, Afghanistan and Chad as the worst, out of 185 countries.

Of the top three nations, only Sweden's ranking changed from the previous year, moving to second from fourth place.

Marc Dullaert, founder and chairman of KidsRights, described this year's report as "alarming for our current and future generations of children."

"A rapidly changing climate is now threatening their futures and their basic rights," he said.

"There has been no significant progress in the standards of children's lives over the past decade and on top of that their livelihoods have been severely impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic," Dullaert added.

The Covid-19 pandemic had a severe impact on children, who were unable to get food or medicine due to disruptions and the closure of clinics, leading to some 286,000 under the age of five years dying as a result, KidsRights said.

The report shows for the first time in two decades, the number of child labourers has risen to 160 million, representing an increase of 8.4 million over the last four years.

But the report also slapped Montenegro for low vaccination numbers, ranked 49 on the index.

The survey uses UN data to measure how countries measure up to the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. 

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