Press
Centre
Media Advisory
UNICEF says clean water is key to building a world truly
fit for children
On the heels of a visit to drought stricken countries
in Southern Africa - UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy
has issued a bold challenge to world leaders attending
the Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg.
Noting that access to clean water can save the lives of
millions of children, Ms. Bellamy called on leaders to
ensure that every school, in every corner of the world,
be equipped with clean water and separate sanitary facilities
for girls and boys by the end of the decade.
Ms. Bellamy, will be hosting a press conference focusing
on why investing in children is a key to sustainable development
and how investing in children is among the most farsighted
decisions world leaders can make to assure sustainable
development.
Who: UNICEF Executive Director, Carol Bellamy
Visumzi Adonis, 10, from Klerksdorp, a mining town in
South Africa.
Justin Geyer, 10, from the Eastern Cape of South Africa.
Hailey Turner, 10, from Merseyside in the United Kingdom.
Where: Main Briefing Room, Sandton Convention
Centre
When: Sunday, September 1 at 13.00
Background: The situation for children globally
continues to remain a challenge:
- 2 million children die every year lacking access
to safe water and proper sanitation
- More than 11 million children die each year from
preventable diseases
- Of the nearly 120 million children not in school
or formal education, the majority are girls; of the
world's nearly 875 million illiterate adults, two thirds
are women.
- A child born today has a 4 out of 10 chance of living
in extreme poverty on less than $1 a day.
- An estimated 11.8 million young people aged 15-24
are living with HIV/AIDS - most of them girls.
As world leaders and thousands of delegates gather to
discuss key issues at the World Summit on Sustainable
Development in Johannesburg, a humanitarian crisis is
unfolding in six countries neighbouring South Africa.
The lives of more than six million children are at immediate
risk in Malawi, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Lesotho, Swaziland and
Mozambique due to a crippling combination of drought,
hunger, illness and HIV/AIDS.
While the challenges in building a world fit for children
are daunting, they are also doable. In the belief that,
a measure of how well the planet is doing depends on how
well children are doing, Ms. Bellamy will be accompanied
by three young people, they are the children of Rio. Ten
years after the Rio Earth Summit they are best placed
to explain what sustainable development means to young
people in the developing and developed world and what
their hopes and dreams are as they attend the World Summit
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