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Tough life

February 29, 2012

A UNICEF report says urbanization has left hundreds of millions of children in cities and towns excluded from vital services, warning that most of these children are being denied a chance to reach their full potential.

https://p.dw.com/p/14Bel
Somali children enjoy a liquid food drink in the port town of Kismayo
More and more children are growing up in citiesImage: AP

The United Nations International Children's Fund released its State of the World's Children 2012: Children in an Urban World report in New York on Tuesday.

In a few years, the report said, more than half of all children will grow up in towns or cities rather than rural areas.

In the West African countries of Nigeria, Ghana and Ivory Coast, this is already the case.

People throng around the Obalende Bus Terminus, where market stall holders try to sell good to the traveling public, in Lagos, Nigeria
Lagos, like many other African cities, has to cope with a huge population growthImage: AP

"When (we) think of Africa, we think of villages. In fact, West Africa is one of the most urbanised regions in sub-Saharan Africa," the UNICEF spokesperson for West Africa, Martin Dawes, said speaking to DW on the phone from Senegal.

"The region is growing faster than most other places," he said.

Dawes pointed out that children growing up in urban areas had certain advantages if they could access services such as health clinics and schools, which are often absent in rural areas. This is often not the case, however.

"Many children are losing out and may even be worse off than they are in rural areas," said Dawes.

Poor living conditions

Cities are growing faster than governments can keep up with, and poor families often pay more for substandard services. Water can cost 50 times more in poor neighborhoods where it has to be bought from street vendors than it does in wealthier districts linked to mains pipes.

Lack of services such as sanitation, clean water, health and education carry "a massive public health risk," Dawes said.

Three African children hold their hands under running water in Rwanda
Clean water is vital for children's healthImage: dapd

The overcrowding and unsanitary conditions prevalent in many slums make it easier for the spread of diseases - notably pneumonia and diarrhoea. Globally, these two illnesses are the leading killers of children under the age of five.

As more and more Africans move into the cities in search of jobs and a better life, informal settlements are a growing problem. Already nearly two thirds of urban dwellers in Africa live in slums, UNICEF found.

African's biggest slum is Kibera on the outskirts of the Kenyan capital, Nairobi. Most of Kibera's estimated one million slum dwellers have no toilet facilities and one pit latrine is shared by up to 50 shacks.

A photo of Kibera showing thousands of poorly-built shanty homes
Ramshackle shelters sprawl through Kibera slum in NairobiImage: DW

According to the report, people living in slums frequently face the threat of eviction and maltreatment, such as when authorities are intent on "cleaning up" these areas.

Such evictions cause major suffering among children.

Other challenges of the city

Urban environments don't just expose children to health risks. According to the UNICEF report, the number of the poor and undernourished is increasing faster in urban areas than in rural areas. Poor nutrition, the report added, contributes to more than a third of under-five deaths globally.

The report highlights a range of other issues affecting children living in towns and cities.

"They are vulnerable to dangers ranging from violence and exploitation to the injuries, illnesses and death that result from living in crowded settlements atop hazardous rubbish dumps or alongside railroad tracks," UNICEF's Executive Director Anthony Lake said.

We must do more to reach all children in need, wherever they are excluded and left behind," he said.

Author: Chrispin Mwakideu / AFP, dpa
Editor: Kate Hairsine / rm