Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Harper urged to use UN speech to push for progress on health of poor kids, moms

Darpan News Desk Canadian Press, 16 Sep, 2014 11:06 AM

    OTTAWA - The United Nations Children's Fund is calling on Prime Minister Stephen Harper to use his coming speech at the General Assembly to push for progress on saving young mothers and newborns in the developing world.

    The call for action comes as UNICEF released a report Tuesday morning that showed lagging progress on the issue.

    The report says the world is making insufficient progress on meeting the fourth UN Millennium Development Goal — to reduce the child mortality rate as of 2015 by two-thirds from the 1990 level.

    The report says that at the current rate, that goal will only be met in 2026.

    Harper has made maternal, newborn and child health his signature foreign aid priority, recently pledging another $3.5 billion over five years to 2020.

    Harper will address the assembly in the coming week and take part in a separate event on the issue with Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on Sept. 25.

    "With the prime minister's emphasis on maternal, newborn child health, this is a chance to stand up before the UN and say, 'this is Canadian leadership; we're going to put our money where our mouth is, and we think that others should as well'," UNICEF Canada President David Morley said in an interview.

    "If we don't step up, we won't be able to save all these lives. Targets that we thought we'd meet now, we're not going to meet until after 2025."

    Morley echoed an overarching finding of the report: even though great progress has been made in improving the survival of children under age five, much more needs to be done.

    "But despite these advances, the toll of under-five deaths over the past two decades is staggering: between 1990 and 2013, 223 million children worldwide died before their fifth birthday," the report says.

    Although progress has been made, pneumonia, diarrhea or malaria "are still the main killers of children," which last year accounted for one-third of deaths among children under the age of five, it says.

    Change is possible, however.

    "The world has the knowledge and solutions to save ever more women, newborns and children dying from causes that are easily avoidable," the UNICEF report says.

    Harper announced his focus on the health of kids and moms in poor countries when he made it his signature initiative of the 2010 G8 leaders' summit that he hosted in Ontario.

    He originally committed $2.8 billion over five years to the Muskoka Initiative.

    Ban appeared at an international conference that Harper hosted in Toronto last spring and gave a ringing endorsement to the initiative before Harper pledged billions more.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Not Safe For Cops To Pick Up After Their Horses, Toronto Police Say In #poopchat

    Not Safe For Cops To Pick Up After Their Horses, Toronto Police Say In #poopchat
    TORONTO - A photo of horse manure on a bike lane in Toronto posted on Twitter has prompted the city's police force to explain the poop-and-scoop policy of its mounted unit.

    Not Safe For Cops To Pick Up After Their Horses, Toronto Police Say In #poopchat

    Week of Carnage: 20 People Die on B.C. Roads in various Accidents

    Week of Carnage: 20 People Die on B.C. Roads in various Accidents
    VANCOUVER - Twenty people have died on British Columbia's highways and roads in the last week, 10 of them within the last 24 hours.

    Week of Carnage: 20 People Die on B.C. Roads in various Accidents

    Firing Gun In Rural Area Not 'inherently' Dangerous, Ontario Appeal Court Rules

    Firing Gun In Rural Area Not 'inherently' Dangerous, Ontario Appeal Court Rules
    TORONTO - A former American military sniper who fired his gun to scare off a stray dog in a rural area of Ontario deserves another trial on charges of careless use of a firearm, the province's top court ruled Friday.

    Firing Gun In Rural Area Not 'inherently' Dangerous, Ontario Appeal Court Rules

    Brian and Mila Mulroney mourning 'dear' friend, comic Joan Rivers

    Brian and Mila Mulroney mourning 'dear' friend, comic Joan Rivers
    OTTAWA - No one was safe from Joan Rivers' sharp-edged humour, not even Mila Mulroney, who, a decade ago, found herself on the pointy end of a Rivers dart.

    Brian and Mila Mulroney mourning 'dear' friend, comic Joan Rivers

    Wireless Startup Mobilicity Files $1.2b Suit Against Industry Canada

    Wireless Startup Mobilicity Files $1.2b Suit Against Industry Canada
    One of the financial backers of wireless startup Mobilicity has filed a lawsuit against the federal government, seeking $1.2 billion in damages for breaking several assurances that Industry Canada officials allegedly made to prospective investors.

    Wireless Startup Mobilicity Files $1.2b Suit Against Industry Canada

    'More Canadian Teens Sharing Sexual Images, Being Extorted'

    'More Canadian Teens Sharing Sexual Images, Being Extorted'
    WINNIPEG - The Canadian Centre for Child Protection says more teens are sharing sexual images and then being extorted for money.

    'More Canadian Teens Sharing Sexual Images, Being Extorted'