What's new

India Fares Worse Than North Korea, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka on Global Hunger Index

Homo Sapiens

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Feb 3, 2015
Messages
9,641
Reaction score
-1
Country
Bangladesh
Location
Bangladesh
http://www.news18.com/news/india/in...ladesh-and-lanka-on-hunger-index-1544239.html
India Fares Worse Than North Korea, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka on Global Hunger Index
According to the Global Hunger Index, the figures of malnourishment, child stunting and child wasting in India have shown no progress in the last 25 years.
Aradhna Wal | News18.com

Updated:October 12, 2017, 2:51 PM IST



malnourishment.jpg

A mother looks at her malnourished child in the Nutritional Rehabilitation Centre of Sheopur district of Madhya Pradesh. (Reuters)

New Delhi: India’s hunger problem is “serious” and the country has tanked on the Global Hunger Index, with a poor rank of 100 among 119 nations.


The Global Hunger Index published on Thursday, co-authored by International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), comes close on the heels of a WHO study published in The Lancet that has said India has the highest number of moderate to severely underweight children in the world.

The two back-to-back studies again highlight the dismal condition of children in India, where about one-fifth or 21% of the children under five are underweight and malnourished.

According to the report, these figures of malnourishment, child stunting and child wasting have shown no progress in the last 25 years.

In a statement, IFPRI’s South Asia Director PK Joshi has put the blame on “drought and structural deficiencies”.

The Global Hunger Index ranks countries as moderate, serious, alarming and extremely alarming in terms of their hunger problems. The higher the rank, the worse the news.

In 2016, India ranked 97 out of 118. However, other south Asian countries like Sri Lanka and Bangladesh have outperformed India this year. North Korea, which had ranked right below India last year has also moved up the ladder this time with a rank of 93.

Pakistan and the war-ravaged Afghanistan are still far behind us.

India’s poor score of 31.4, worse than last year’s 28.5, is a serious cause of concern. The Index notes, “Given that three-quarters of South Asia’s population resides in India, the situation in that country strongly influences South Asia’s regional score.”

It also endangers the Sustainable Development Goal of achieving zero hunger by 2030.

South Asia became the worst performing region in the world, with an average score of 30.9, followed by Africa, south of the Sahara scoring 29.4. Africa still fares better as many African nations are dotting the ‘alarming’ category, and the Central African Republic (CAR) occupying the ‘extremely alarming’ category.

One fifth of India’s children under five are wasting with weight very less than what is required with their height. One-third of the population or 38.4 percent are stunted, short for their age.

India’s wasting figures as compared to those of Djibouti, Sri Lanka and South Sudan, the report says, have made no progress in 25 years. In Asia, the lowest levels of hunger were in China, Fiji, Malaysia, Thailand and Mongolia.

However, India has made some progress with two national programmes, says the report. The Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) and the National Health Mission (NHM), though are yet to reach an adequate coverage, have made substantial impact.

Though India has an action plan in place to rid the country of undernourishment by 2022, the Index came up with three points of concern.

The timely introduction of complementary food that weans a child away from exclusive breastfeeding dropped to 42.7 percent in 2016 from 52.7 percent in 2006.

In 2016, only 9.6 percent of children in the 6-23 months age bracket received an adequate diet with only 48.4 percent households having access to better sanitation facilities.
 
Last edited:
.
Superpower delusion is much responsible for this state of affairs in India where hunger problem is even worse than North Korea! By rushing to become superpower, India has neglected vast rural population, low caste hindus and religious minorities and concentrated development in a few pocket in northern and western big cities and small states for the benefit of high caste, urban elite to feel the touch of a rich,powerful country.
 
Last edited:
.
Superpower delusion is much responsible for this state of affairs in India where hunger problem is even worse than North Korea.By rushing to become superpower, India has neglected vast rural, low caste and religious minorities and concentrated development in a few pocket in northern and western big cities and small states for the benefit of high caste, urban elite to feel the touch of a rich,powerful country.
Brother don't forget to add the following to your long list:
Fascism creeping in India
Holiday Desk

The Alliance for Justice and Accountability (AJA), an umbrella coalition of progressive organizations across the United States, has condemned the life-threatening attacks against renowned author and Dalit scholar Kancha Illaiah by members of the Arya Vysyas community.

The attack was an attempt on the life of the outspoken political philosopher who has authored several books including “Why I am not a Hindu,” “Buffalo Nationalism Post-Hindu India,” “Untouchable God,” among many others.
The violence and ensuing death threats were apparently a response to the release of a chapter from his book on “Post-Hindu India.”

AJA has demanded court ordered 24-hour protection of Professor Kancha Illaiah, and accountability for those that threatened his life, under the full extent of the law.
The role of the police, who failed to even file a First Information Report (FIR), on Prof. Illaiah’s complaint needs further scrutiny.

The life-threatening situation was exacerbated when a Member of Parliament from the Telugu Desam Party (TDP) T.G. Venkatesh addressed a press conference against the author and demanded that he be “hanged publicly.” The silence of mainstream Indian media is telling of an atmosphere where expression of any ideas that go against the Hindutva narrative creates security risks.

Instead of expressing remorse for the incident, J. Venkateshwar-President of Andhra Pradesh Arya Varsya Mahasahba (AVP) demanded an apology from Prof. Illaiah, failing which AVP would protest wherever Prof. Illaiah went in the state.

“The police’s bias and refusal to uphold the law in defence of an intellectual bodes ill for the safety and security of common citizens in India and for the future of political dissent,” said Mr. Ahsan Khan, President of Indian American Muslim Council (IAMC), an affiliate body of AJA. “That a sitting MP called for violence against a renowned scholar is reflective of the extent to which a fascist mindset has taken root amongst sections of the Indian political class,” added Mr. Khan.

In Illaiah’s complaint, he stated that no FIR was registered in the matter by the police. After the attack Illaiah was followed by 200 noisy protestors until he proceeded to Warangal city under a police escort. Illaiah put himself under house arrest in an effort to safeguard his life.

“An attack against one of the most renowned Dalit scholars, writers and thinkers is outrageous and an affront to freedom of speech. People are not tolerant and open to criticism when information challenges Hindu doctrine,” said Umang Kumar, a member of AJA ad community activist from Boston.

The Alliance for Justice and Accountability has pledged to work with people of all faiths to defend India from the onslaught of hate and divisiveness.
http://www.weeklyholiday.net/Homepage/Pages/UserHome.aspx
 
.
Superpower delusion is much responsible for this state of affairs in India where hunger problem is even worse than North Korea! By rushing to become superpower, India has neglected vast rural population, low caste hindus and religious minorities and concentrated development in a few pocket in northern and western big cities and small states for the benefit of high caste, urban elite to feel the touch of a rich,powerful country.
how dare you question a supapowa !!:mad:
 
.
Brother don't forget to add the following to your long list:
Fascism creeping in India
Holiday Desk

The Alliance for Justice and Accountability (AJA), an umbrella coalition of progressive organizations across the United States, has condemned the life-threatening attacks against renowned author and Dalit scholar Kancha Illaiah by members of the Arya Vysyas community.

The attack was an attempt on the life of the outspoken political philosopher who has authored several books including “Why I am not a Hindu,” “Buffalo Nationalism Post-Hindu India,” “Untouchable God,” among many others.
The violence and ensuing death threats were apparently a response to the release of a chapter from his book on “Post-Hindu India.”

AJA has demanded court ordered 24-hour protection of Professor Kancha Illaiah, and accountability for those that threatened his life, under the full extent of the law.
The role of the police, who failed to even file a First Information Report (FIR), on Prof. Illaiah’s complaint needs further scrutiny.

The life-threatening situation was exacerbated when a Member of Parliament from the Telugu Desam Party (TDP) T.G. Venkatesh addressed a press conference against the author and demanded that he be “hanged publicly.” The silence of mainstream Indian media is telling of an atmosphere where expression of any ideas that go against the Hindutva narrative creates security risks.

Instead of expressing remorse for the incident, J. Venkateshwar-President of Andhra Pradesh Arya Varsya Mahasahba (AVP) demanded an apology from Prof. Illaiah, failing which AVP would protest wherever Prof. Illaiah went in the state.

“The police’s bias and refusal to uphold the law in defence of an intellectual bodes ill for the safety and security of common citizens in India and for the future of political dissent,” said Mr. Ahsan Khan, President of Indian American Muslim Council (IAMC), an affiliate body of AJA. “That a sitting MP called for violence against a renowned scholar is reflective of the extent to which a fascist mindset has taken root amongst sections of the Indian political class,” added Mr. Khan.

In Illaiah’s complaint, he stated that no FIR was registered in the matter by the police. After the attack Illaiah was followed by 200 noisy protestors until he proceeded to Warangal city under a police escort. Illaiah put himself under house arrest in an effort to safeguard his life.

“An attack against one of the most renowned Dalit scholars, writers and thinkers is outrageous and an affront to freedom of speech. People are not tolerant and open to criticism when information challenges Hindu doctrine,” said Umang Kumar, a member of AJA ad community activist from Boston.

The Alliance for Justice and Accountability has pledged to work with people of all faiths to defend India from the onslaught of hate and divisiveness.
http://www.weeklyholiday.net/Homepage/Pages/UserHome.aspx
The reality is ,India is among the handful countries in the world where fascism is mainstream! The birthplace of fascism, in Europe, fascist are a tiny minority without any state power.But in India, hindu fascist are ruling the country and making life hell for everyone else other than caste hindu and cow.
 
. .
Murder of dissenting newsmen rising in India
Nava Thakuria
in Guwahati, Assam

The media fraternity of India observed an unusual Gandhi Jayanti this time as scores of scribes across the country organized protest demonstrations in different locations with the sole demand for ensuring security and justice for working journalists. Press clubs, journo-bodies and media organizations formed human chains, symbolic protests and also took out missiles in support of the demand.

The reason behind in demonstrating their angers on the birthday of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi on October 2 was the relentless violence against the journalists in different forms across the South Asian nation. With the spirit of Mahatma Gandhi, who was a dedicated journalist before emerging as India’s Father of the Nation, the media fraternity thus committed to defy all mental and physical challenges in their professional lives.
Murder has become a routine
For some reason, the largest democracy in the globe remains an unsafe place for journalists under successive regimes in India. The populous country witnesses the murder of around five media persons annually and that has not been changed for decades. Three newsmen were murdered in September and so far eight journalists were killed during 2017. It was only Kannada editor Gauri Lankesh’s murder on September 5 at her Bangaluru residence aroused massive protests across the country. She was shot dead by unidentified gunmen.

A Leftist journalist Ms Gauri’s assassination tempted more civil society groups predominantly against the Hindu nationalist ideologue like Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangha (RSS) along with Bhartiya Janata Party (BJP), to come to streets demanding justice. They alleged that the outspoken journalist was targeted by the ruling political elements as she used to criticize both RSS and BJP absolutely.
Protest-demonstrations were so huge and strong that it inspired a CPI (Marxist) run Tripura government chief minister Manik Sarkar to participate in the demonstration at Agartala.

Condemnations from various national and international bodies were also pouring in against the brutal murder of Shantanu, 29, who used to work for an Agartala based Bengali-language cable news channel named Din-Raat.

Meanwhile, Shantanu’s killing was condemned and condoled by various international forums like the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), the Pars-based Reporters without Borders (RSF), the Brussels-based International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) etc, where everyone asked the Tripura government to go for a ‘thorough investigation’ into the death of Shantanu to bring those responsible to justice and also ensure the future safety of journalists.
Protests pouring in globally
Amnesty International, in its condemnation statement pointed out that the killing of journalists cannot become the order of the day. State governments in India must do everything in their power to prevent journalists from becoming targets of attacks. Authorities must end the impunity for these killings, it added.

Condemning the killing of Shantanu, UNESCO director-general Irina Bokova said, “I trust the authorities will conduct an investigation into this killing and bring its perpetrators to justice.”
In India, all influential media bodies like Indian Newspaper Society, Editors’ Guild of India, Broadcast Editors’ Association, Press Club of India, Indian Women’s Press Corps, Federation of Press Clubs in India besides various journalist unions strongly condemned the murder of Shantanu and urged the Manik Sarkar government help delivering justice.
Even the Press Council of India, a quasi-judicial body, took note of Shantanu’s killing and sought a report from the Tripura government.

All media bodies of northeast India came put with the protest demonstrations against the killing of Shantanu and demanding a high level probe (preferably by Central Bureau of Investigation). Extending moral supports to the Tripura journalists for justice, the media bodies asked the government to compensate the family of Shantanu adequately.

According to the RSF, India is ranked 136th among 180 countries in its World Press Freedom Index (2017) barometer, which is just ahead of its neighbours like Pakistan (139th), Sri Lanka (141), Bangladesh (146) and China (176). Norway topped the list where India’s neighbors including Bhutan (84), Nepal (100), Maldives (117), Afghanistan (120), Burma (131) etc are ahead of it. One party ruled North Korea (180) is at the bottom of the list, where Vietnam and China were placed at 175 and 176 positions respectively.

The string of Indian journo-killings this year began with Hari Prakash (killed on January 2) and the trend continued with the murder of Brajesh Kumar Singh (January 3), Shyam Sharma (May 15), Kamlesh Jain (May 31), Surender Singh Rana (July 29), Ms Gauri, Shantanu and KJ Singh (September 23). India lost six journalists to assailants in 2016, which was preceded by five cases in 2015. It witnessed murders of two scribes in 2014, but the year 2013 reported as many as 11 journalists’ murders.
http://www.weeklyholiday.net/Homepage/Pages/UserHome.aspx
 
.
Superpower delusion is much responsible for this state of affairs in India where hunger problem is even worse than North Korea! By rushing to become superpower, India has neglected vast rural population, low caste hindus and religious minorities and concentrated development in a few pocket in northern and western big cities and small states for the benefit of high caste, urban elite to feel the touch of a rich,powerful country.
Fake news! Please note that you are questioning a superpower! Who gave you the courage?!
 
. . . .
Yet Another Modi master stroke, fooling the world India is poor and hungry but in reality India is shupa pawa

LOL. I'm getting a whip lash about all this Supa Powa claims and then the malnutrition, poverty and defecation in the open. Could any India tell me which is the real India. I want to hear your views.
 
. .
Sad , BIMARU states need to get their sh*t together.

Yet Another Modi master stroke, fooling the world India is poor and hungry but in reality India is shupa pawa
Lol seriously? You rank lower than India :crazy:
 
. .
Back
Top Bottom