UNICEF

Hidden Camera Exposes Corruption

It's children like these girls that may never recieve the free medicine from aid groups like Unicef, because of the thriving black market. Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/travlr/83146114/">Travlr (flickr)</a>
It's children like these girls that may never recieve the free medicine from aid groups like Unicef, because of the thriving black market. Photo: Travlr (flickr)

BBC investigative reporter Sorious Samura uses a hidden camera to confront pharmacists selling Unicef-provided drugs distributed by Unicef in Sierra Leone. The drugs were intended to be distributed free of charge. When he tries to ask citizena how the pharmacists could sell medicines intended to be distributed for free, they appear confused: “We don’t have any medicine that is free here.”

This is one instance of corruption that Samura cites in his accompanying opinion piece raising questions about the value of aiding Africa and how much corruption distorts the good intentions of donors.

India’s Next Generation Left Behind?

Topics: Women, Health, Economic Development
Countries: India

Despite the many signs of progress, India’s quality of economic growth has been questioned by Unicef in its 2008 State of Asia-Pacific's Children report. According to the report, India’s poorest children are not being provided basic health care, despite the country’s impressive economic performance.

In 2006 alone, 2.1 million children under five years old died in India, giving the country an infant mortality rate of 57 per 1,000 births, one of the worst rates of child survival in the world. In fact, together China and India account for nearly a third of the child deaths in the world today.

Despite being a popular destination for medical tourism, unequal access to medical care continues to be a consequence of India's growing disparity between the rich and poor. Unicef's report found that “a child born to a family in the wealthiest fifth of the population is about three times more likely to receive all the basic vaccinations than a child born in the poorest fifth.” And it appears that the issue extends beyond economics — many women and children are also unable to access proper health care.

According to the report, "one out of every three women is underweight," putting them at risk of having low birthweight babies that "are 20 times more likely to die in infancy than healthy babies." Bloomberg.com's analysis of the report also points out that, "South Asia is the only region in the world where female life expectancy is lower than male life expectancy and where girls are more likely to be underweight than boys." Paradoxically, India also has "the world's largest number of professionally qualified women" and "more women as doctors, surgeons, scientists and professors than the United States has," according to Smile Foundation, a organization in India that targets at providing education and health to underprivileged children.

Yet no matter how robust its economy may be, unless the Indian government directly intervenes in issues of poverty and inequality plaguing the country, advancement in development may suffer. For progress to be sustainable, those who benefit from economic opportunities must not forget those left behind.

From the Archives

Floods Increase Risk of Malnutrition and Disease in Somalia

Previously filed under: Africa, Health
UNICEF Emergency Officer, Bob McCarthy, discusses health and sanitation concerns in Somalia due to significant flooding over the last four weeks.

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