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As per
the
recent
(September
2014)UN
report
“Improving
Children's
Lives,
Transforming
the
Future –
25 years
of child
rights
in South
Asia”
-
India
had the
highest
number
of
unregistered
children
under
age five
between
2000 and
2012
India
had the
second-highest
number
of child
marriages
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UN
report
says
India
still
needed
to
improve
immunisation
coverage
and stop
gender-based
sex
selection.
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At 71
million,
India
had the
largest
number
of
children
under
the age
of five
whose
births
were not
registered
between
2000 and
2012.
-
India
has the
greatest
disparity
between
the
poorest
and
richest
households,
with
children
in the
poorest
households
being
three
times
less
likely
to be
registered
than
those in
the
richest.
-
Religion
also
appears
to play
a role
as
Muslims
have the
lowest
level of
birth
registration
in India
(39 per
cent)
followed
by
Hindus
(40 per
cent)
while
the
Jains
have the
highest
(87 per
cent).
-
The
report
said
that
birth
registration
levels
in South
Asia
have
increased
since
2000,
but
progress
has been
slow.
-
India,
along
with
Afghanistan,
Bangladesh
and the
Maldives,
has been
recording
“significant
improvement”
in birth
registration
but
about
100
million
children
in the
region
are
still
not
registered
at
birth.
46% of
South Asian
girls marry
by 18
Almost
half of all
girls in
South Asia
marry before
the age of
18. One in
five girls
are married
before the
age of 15.
These are
the highest
rates in the
world.
In India, 43
per cent of
women aged
20-24 were
first
married by
the age of
18 between
2005-2013.
Girls with
no education
are 5.5
times more
likely to
marry or
enter into
union as
those with
at least 10
years of
education.
On
gender-biased
sex
selection,
the report
said the
practice is
more
prevalent in
the west and
northwest
part of the
country.
The child
sex ratio,
which is the
number of
girls per
1,000 boys,
among
children
aged 0-4 in
India was
924.
On
immunisation
coverage, it
said some
countries in
South Asia,
particularly
Bangladesh,
Sri Lanka
and Nepal,
have made
significant
improvements
since 1990
but coverage
is still far
too low in
Afghanistan,
India and
Pakistan.
The report
was released
to
commemorate
25 years
since the
1989 U.N.
adoption of
the
Convention
of the
Rights of
the Child.
It pointed
to some
improvements
over the
past two
decades as
South Asian
government
adopted
policies to
protect
child
rights.
The
prevalence
of children
with stunted
growth in
the region
dropped from
more than 60
per cent in
1990 to 38
per cent in
2012 as
nutrition
improved,
the report
said.
Report says
regional
averages
mask
disparities,
with
stunting far
more
pervasive
among
children
from poor
families,
rural areas
and
oppressed
ethnicities.
It said more
than 2
million
South Asian
children die
before their
fifth
birthday of
preventable
causes, and
nearly 38
per cent of
children
have chronic
malnutrition.
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