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Children’s Miserable Life in Poorest Nations

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Message  Sara Ghazioui Mer 23 Nov - 14:26

Many children are living a miserable life in poorest countries. Living conditions are deteriorating at an alarming rate. Many find it hard to access to enough food, clean water, and medical care. Furthermore, they suffer from diseases like malaria or HIV/AIDS and physical abuse.



Maissara Chaharmane, the head of the Domoni Therapeutic Nutrition Centre, said that malnutrition in Union of the Comoros is mostly due to lack of knowledge. Over 42% of Comorian children from five years old downward suffer from chronic malnutrition. Just one small percentage of babies is breastfed. Comoros is one of the world’s poorest countries. Its real GDP expansion was low, 1.9% in 2004.
Sarah Skovachez
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Mary Rose
2010/10/14 |3044 views|0
Children’s Miserable Life in Poorest Nations
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Many children are living a miserable life in poorest countries. Living conditions are deteriorating at an alarming rate. Many find it hard to access to enough food, clean water, and medical care. Furthermore, they suffer from diseases like malaria or HIV/AIDS and physical abuse.



Maissara Chaharmane, the head of the Domoni Therapeutic Nutrition Centre, said that malnutrition in Union of the Comoros is mostly due to lack of knowledge. Over 42% of Comorian children from five years old downward suffer from chronic malnutrition. Just one small percentage of babies is breastfed. Comoros is one of the world’s poorest countries. Its real GDP expansion was low, 1.9% in 2004.











Malaria causes more deaths annually in Niger. 50% deaths among children under five are caused by malaria. This landlocked country in Western Africa has the lowest Human Development Index on Earth. Famine struck the Sahel from June to August 2010. 350,000 faced starvation and 1,200,000 were at risk of famine
Sarah Skovachez
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Mary Rose
2010/10/14 |3044 views|0
Children’s Miserable Life in Poorest Nations
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Many children are living a miserable life in poorest countries. Living conditions are deteriorating at an alarming rate. Many find it hard to access to enough food, clean water, and medical care. Furthermore, they suffer from diseases like malaria or HIV/AIDS and physical abuse.



Maissara Chaharmane, the head of the Domoni Therapeutic Nutrition Centre, said that malnutrition in Union of the Comoros is mostly due to lack of knowledge. Over 42% of Comorian children from five years old downward suffer from chronic malnutrition. Just one small percentage of babies is breastfed. Comoros is one of the world’s poorest countries. Its real GDP expansion was low, 1.9% in 2004.




Union of the Comoros (GDP – per capita: $600)

Union of the Comoros (GDP – per capita: $600)




Malaria causes more deaths annually in Niger. 50% deaths among children under five are caused by malaria. This landlocked country in Western Africa has the lowest Human Development Index on Earth. Famine struck the Sahel from June to August 2010. 350,000 faced starvation and 1,200,000 were at risk of famine









Zimbabwe introduced a new Z$100 trillion banknote in January 2009 due to its runaway inflation. Along with widespread poverty and HIV/AIDS, this landlocked country faces high unemployment, political violence, and a heavily lacking infrastructure. The children of Zimbabwe have fallen through the cracks from colonialism and civil war.
Sarah Skovachez
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Mary Rose
2010/10/14 |3044 views|0
Children’s Miserable Life in Poorest Nations
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Many children are living a miserable life in poorest countries. Living conditions are deteriorating at an alarming rate. Many find it hard to access to enough food, clean water, and medical care. Furthermore, they suffer from diseases like malaria or HIV/AIDS and physical abuse.



Maissara Chaharmane, the head of the Domoni Therapeutic Nutrition Centre, said that malnutrition in Union of the Comoros is mostly due to lack of knowledge. Over 42% of Comorian children from five years old downward suffer from chronic malnutrition. Just one small percentage of babies is breastfed. Comoros is one of the world’s poorest countries. Its real GDP expansion was low, 1.9% in 2004.




Union of the Comoros (GDP – per capita: $600)

Union of the Comoros (GDP – per capita: $600)




Malaria causes more deaths annually in Niger. 50% deaths among children under five are caused by malaria. This landlocked country in Western Africa has the lowest Human Development Index on Earth. Famine struck the Sahel from June to August 2010. 350,000 faced starvation and 1,200,000 were at risk of famine




Niger (GDP – per capita: $700)

Niger (GDP – per capita: $700)




Zimbabwe introduced a new Z$100 trillion banknote in January 2009 due to its runaway inflation. Along with widespread poverty and HIV/AIDS, this landlocked country faces high unemployment, political violence, and a heavily lacking infrastructure. The children of Zimbabwe have fallen through the cracks from colonialism and civil war.






Conditions for children in Somalia are deteriorating at an alarming rate. The numbers of malnourished children are growing as a result of crop failures, severe drought, hyperinflation, and rising food prices. Displaced children can not access to enough clean water, food, and medical care. Children are vulnerable to exploitation and physical abuse.
Republic of Liberia is one of the ten poorest nations across the globe. Its external debt surpasses its GDP. This country suffers from poor economic performance with decline in the export of commodities and the flight of many investors and lack of infrastructure.






Sara Ghazioui

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Message  WISSAL BELGAOUT Jeu 24 Nov - 13:45

I think there is a paragraph of which is repeated here Rolling Eyes
WISSAL BELGAOUT
WISSAL BELGAOUT

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Message  Sara Ghazioui Jeu 24 Nov - 14:54

Maybe because i've a problem in my pc :/ i'm sorry for that

Sara Ghazioui

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Message  Mrs HILMI Jeu 24 Nov - 15:30

Sara Ghazioui a écrit:Maybe because i've a problem in my pc :/ i'm sorry for that

May be you should read before pasting stuff from the net !!!!
Why don't sum up all the thing so that we'll be more interested?

Mrs HILMI

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Message  Sara Ghazioui Ven 25 Nov - 16:41

Ok!The next time,i must summarize and after i put it on the site Smile

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