SOS from UNICEF: Accuses rich countries of endangering children around the world

The rich countries are turning against UNICEF emphasizing how create dangerous living conditions for children around the world while calling on them to reduce the volume of their garbage, air pollution and water reimgs.

A report by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) Innocenti Research Center released on Tuesday (24/5) analyzed data from the 39 member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and the European Union (EU). based on various criteria: the use of insecticides, humidity in homes, lead contamination, lighting, waste.

Although Spain, Ireland and Portugal are considered good students, none of the countries studied offers healthy environments for childrenaccording to the report.

Australia, Belgium, Canada and the USA do not guarantee it to children living in their territories, while the less rich countriesin Latin America and Europe, have a less serious impact on the state of the planet, according to the report.

“Not just the majority of rich countries fails to provide her own children with healthy environments but, worse, contributes to the destruction of those other children“Elsewhere in the world,” Gunilla Olson, director of the Innocenti Center, told UNICEF in a press release, according to the Athens News Agency.

More than 20 million children have elevated blood lead levels

In the 39 countries surveyed, more than 20 million children have elevated blood lead levels, according to the report.

Although Finland, Iceland and Norway are at the top of the rankings in terms of providing a healthy environment to their own youth, the opposite is true, they are at the bottom of the rankings in terms of their impact on the planet in terms of emissions, the volume of so-called e-garbage, the level of consumption;

Iceland, Latvia, Portugal and the United Kingdom, one in five children is exposed to moisture and mold in their homewhile in Cyprus, Hungary and Turkey the problem concerns more than one in four children.

Many children breathe toxic air inside and outside their homes, especially in Mexico, unlike in Finland and Japan, the report says. In Belgium, Israel, the Netherlands, Poland, the Czech Republic and Switzerland, more than one child in 12 is exposed to high levels of insecticide.

Source: News Beast

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