The
number of children who do not attend school is rising, child marriage
has not dropped in decades and millions of young children will die
mostly preventable deaths by 2030 if global poverty is not addressed,
UNICEF said in a bleak report issued on Tuesday.
Poor
children are twice as likely as rich children to die before age 5, and
poor girls are more than twice as likely to become child brides in signs
of troubling inequality, said the annual report by the United Nations'
children's agency.
Noting some progress in halving
global mortality rates for children under 5 since 1990 and boys and
girls attending primary school in equal numbers in 129 countries, the
report said such developments have been neither even nor fair, with
repercussions for global turmoil.
"Some of the big challenges that we now face, like refugees and migrants, are connected with inequality and poverty," Justin Forsyth, Undine's deputy executive director, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Narrowing that inequity "is good for those children, but it's also good to stop future crises," he said.
The
report called for stronger efforts to educate the world's children,
noting that on average each additional year of education a child
receives increases her or his adult earnings by about 10 percent.
Also
it said for each additional year of schooling completed on average by
young adults, a nation's poverty rate drops 9 percent.
About
124 million children do not go to primary and lower-secondary school, a
number that has increased about 2 million since 2011, it said.
Children
born to educated mothers are almost 3 times less likely to die and more
likely to go to school, delay marriage and postpone child bearing, said
the report, entitled "State of the World's Children."
The
rate of child marriages among the world's poorest girls has remained
unchanged since about 1990, and 15 million girls are married as children
every year, it said.
If nothing is done, it said
69 million children will die before age 5 from mostly preventable causes
by 2030, and nearly of half of them will be from sub-Saharan Africa.
Nine
out of ten children in the same region will be living in extreme
poverty, which means living on less than $1.90 U.S. per day, it said.
Battling
such poverty and equality and promoting education for children,
particularly girls, were among the U.n.' s Sustainable Development
Goals, a set of 17 goals adopted last fall to tackle an array of global
woes by 2030.
Educating children is particularly critical given the global conflicts fueled by decimalization, Forsyth added.
"There
is a direct link between children for many, many years missing out on
education and then the ability of more extremist elements to organize," he said.
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