This is not a frivilous thread.
It's not one that anyone will be able to draw me into a debate over.
I saw another thread, asking about how it is in a particular country.
This is how it is, if you're not a visiting or transported Westerner. To ask someone who's there and is such, that's a little frivilous.
If you live in the USA or UK, or many other places, and think it's tough, it's not by comparison.
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While 600 million children under the age of 18 lack access to one of these basic human needs, more than 350 million are deprived of two or more of these needs, said Growing up in Asia, a report from the child humanitarian organization Plan.
Plan said half of Asia's families are not benefiting from economic growth and globalization. It blamed the pressure of rapid population growth on scarce resources; lack of access to education, healthcare, clean water and sanitation; caste discrimination; and weak governance and corruption.
"Asia has more than twice as many severely deprived children as sub-Saharan Africa. This scale of child poverty will have a serious impact on Asia's future prospects, unless it is addressed now," Michael Diamond, Plan's Asia regional director, said in a news release.
The report said that to combat poverty, the international community needs to reduce subsidies given to U.S., European and Japanese farmers and forgive billions of dollars in debt. It also said richer countries could help by paying more for the goods they buy from developing countries.
Plan has pledged to invest $1 billion on poverty reduction across 12 Asian countries over the next decade.
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On the Net:
It's not one that anyone will be able to draw me into a debate over.
I saw another thread, asking about how it is in a particular country.
This is how it is, if you're not a visiting or transported Westerner. To ask someone who's there and is such, that's a little frivilous.
If you live in the USA or UK, or many other places, and think it's tough, it's not by comparison.
***********************************
While 600 million children under the age of 18 lack access to one of these basic human needs, more than 350 million are deprived of two or more of these needs, said Growing up in Asia, a report from the child humanitarian organization Plan.
Plan said half of Asia's families are not benefiting from economic growth and globalization. It blamed the pressure of rapid population growth on scarce resources; lack of access to education, healthcare, clean water and sanitation; caste discrimination; and weak governance and corruption.
"Asia has more than twice as many severely deprived children as sub-Saharan Africa. This scale of child poverty will have a serious impact on Asia's future prospects, unless it is addressed now," Michael Diamond, Plan's Asia regional director, said in a news release.
The report said that to combat poverty, the international community needs to reduce subsidies given to U.S., European and Japanese farmers and forgive billions of dollars in debt. It also said richer countries could help by paying more for the goods they buy from developing countries.
Plan has pledged to invest $1 billion on poverty reduction across 12 Asian countries over the next decade.
___
On the Net:
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