Karnal wrote on Dec 18
th, 2015 at 2:52pm:
Quote:Which particular survey says that the people in India want solar, rather than food??
Which particular survey says that the people of rural India want food rather than electricity, Gizmo?
Oh, that's right. It was in the cartoon.
"India's hunger 'shame': 3,000 children die every day, despite economic growth
Thursday Feb 16, 2012 6:52 AM
EMAIL
Severely malnourished girl Rajni, 2, is weighed by health workers in Madhya Pradesh, India, February 1.
BY REUTERS
Crying as she is put on an electronic scale, two-year-old Rajini's naked shriveled frame casts a dark shadow over a rising India, where millions of children have little to eat.
The children are scrawny, listless and sick in this run-down nutrition clinic in central India
with its intermittent power supply. If they survive they will grow up shorter, weaker and less smart than their better-fed peers.
Rajini weighs 5 kg (11 lb), about half of what she should.
"She's as light as a leaf, this can't be good," says her grandmother, Sushila Devi, poking her rib-protruding stomach in the clinic in Shivpuri district in Madhya Pradesh state.
Almost as shocking as India's high prevalence of child malnutrition is the country's failure to reduce it, despite the economy tripling between 1990 and 2005 to become Asia's third largest and annual per capita income rising to $489 from $96.
1 in 4 children malnourished, global report says
A government-supported survey last month said 42 percent of children under five are underweight - almost double that of sub-Saharan Africa - compared to 43 percent five years ago.
The statistic - which means 3,000 children dying daily due to illnesses related to poor diets - led Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to admit malnutrition was "a national shame" and was putting the health of the nation in jeopardy.
"It is a national shame. Child nutrition is a marker of the many things that are not going right for the poor of India," said Purnima Menon, research fellow on poverty, health and nutrition at the Institute of Food Policy Research Institute.
India's efforts to reduce the number of undernourished kids have been largely hampered by blighting poverty where many cannot afford the amount and types of food they need."
Of course I do understand that you need to 'blame' any middle class Australian for the failings of other countries economic systems...(which make YOU a really sad and silly, individual)