Sudan One of Most Dangerous Places for Mothers
New York, Oct 27 2009 11:10AM
Sudan is one of the world’s more dangerous places for mothers, the top United Nations Children’s Fund (http://www.unicef.org/) official there said today, calling for increased maternal care services.
Some
26,000 women in Sudan – with a population of over 40
million – face death annually giving birth, UNICEF
Representative Nils Kastberg said, compared to fewer than
10,000 maternal deaths per year in the entire Latin American
and Caribbean region which is home to 550 million
people.
The maternal deaths in Sudan are
“preventable,” he stressed to reporters in the capital,
Khartoum. “It is a question of stopping the bleeding in
time; it is a question of having the health staff where they
should be; it is a question of health staff washing their
hands; it is a question of her being close to a place where
she can receive care that could save her life at the moment
of giving birth.”
The UNICEF Representative, who
took up the post last month, said that during a recent visit
to a Sudanese town he saw 20 tanks but only one ambulance,
which is only in operation six months out of the year due to
the heavy rains.
He also sounded the alarm on the
deaths of 305,000 Sudanese children under the age of five
every year due to preventable causes, with over one-third
losing their lives in the first 28 days of
life.
Further, while six million children are in
school, nearly three million are not, he pointed out at
today’s press conference at the headquarters of the UN
Mission in Sudan ("><"http://unmis.unmissions.org/Default.aspx?tabid=511">).
Mr.
Kastberg said that he hopes that over the next three years,
maternal and child mortality rates will be slashed by
one-third through the provision of insecticide-treated
mosquito nets and other measures, with school attendance
jumping up by one-third.
“Sudan, more than ever,
needs peace,” he underscored.
With most of the
world’s violence caused by men and not women, “I think
we need a call to all Sudanese men to assume a greater
responsibility of understanding how their actions cause harm
to women and children and I hope that can make a huge
difference,” the official said.
“Let’s have
more ambulances and less
tanks.”
ENDS