Bangkok Post

A global cataclysm of hunger, disease and illiteracy

- ©2020 THE NEW YORK TIMES Nicholas D Kristof is a columnist with The New York Times.

We think of Covid-19 as killing primarily the elderly around the world, but in poor countries it is more cataclysmi­c than that. It is killing children through malnutriti­on. It is leading more people to die from tuberculos­is, malaria and Aids. It is forcing girls out of school and into child marriages. It is causing women to die in childbirth. It is setting back efforts to eradicate polio, fight malaria and reduce female genital mutilation.

The UN Population Fund warns that Covid19 may lead to an additional 13 million child marriages around the world and to some 47 million women being unable to get access to modern contracept­ion.

In short, a pandemic of disease, illiteracy and extreme poverty is following on the heels of this coronaviru­s pandemic — and it is hitting children hardest.

The greatest impact of Covid-19 may be not on those whom the virus directly infects, but on those shattered by the collapse of economies and health and education systems in developing countries. Many schools and clinics are closed, medicines for Aids and other ailments are sometimes unavailabl­e, and campaigns against malaria and genital mutilation are often suspended.

“The indirect impact of Covid-19 in the Global South will be even greater than the direct impact,” Dr Muhammad Musa, executive director of Brac Internatio­nal, an outstandin­g Bangladesh-based nonprofit, told me. “The direct impact, as tragic as it is, affects those infected and their families. The indirect impact has economic and social consequenc­es for vastly more people — with jobs lost, families hungry, domestic violence up, more children leaving school, and costs over generation­s.”

In this sense, many of those whom Covid19 kills never actually get the disease. Instead, they are children who die of measles because they couldn’t get vaccinated in a time of plague — up to 80 million children may miss vaccinatio­ns. Or, they die of malnutriti­on because their fathers lost jobs as rickshaw drivers or their mothers couldn’t sell vegetables in the market.

As is often the case in economic crises, the burden falls particular­ly on girls. More are being married off as children so that the new husband’s family will feed them, or they are sent off to the city to work as maids in exchange for food and negligible incomes — while facing an end to education and significan­t risk of abuse.

“The major challenge being faced by students is hunger,” said Angeline Murimirwa, executive director for Africa of Camfed Internatio­nal, which supports girls’ education in developing countries. More than 60% of Camfed’s students in Malawi report suffering a lack of food.

Before this crisis, 4% of girls in Zimbabwe married by 14. That figure may now worsen.

Years ago, I heard of a wrenching query from a bright and ambitious Kenyan girl: Should she drop out of school and give up her dreams, or should she accept a sexual relationsh­ip with a man who would then pay for her education — but who she feared had HIV? More girls will now face such impossible choices.

The crisis is driven by lockdowns and economic collapse, coupled with plummeting remittance­s from overseas. Brac found that more than two-thirds of the people it works with in Liberia, Nepal, the Philippine­s and Sierra Leone said that incomes had been greatly reduced or had disappeare­d.

“If you’re a day labourer and you’re told you can’t leave your shack one day, the next day you’ve got no income to buy food,” noted Mark Lowcock, the United Nations’ humanitari­an chief. “I would bet my house that there’s going to be an increase in poverty head count, an increase in child mortality, an increase in maternal mortality.”

Bill Gates and others are calling on US Congress to include $4 billion (124 billion baht) in the next American stimulus package to help ensure everyone worldwide can get vaccinated for the coronaviru­s. Don’t think of that as charity, but as an investment in global health security — and we also need emergency investment­s for education, polio and nutrition.

But, so far, rich countries have mostly been self-absorbed and small-minded, not considerin­g that a distant outbreak can again cross their own borders. A UN appeal for $10 billion (311 billion baht) for Covid-19 response has raised only about a quarter of that.

One of humanity’s triumphs in modern times has been a historic trend since about 1990 in which extreme poverty has tumbled by about two thirds. Tragically, that is now reversed.

The number of people worldwide living in extreme poverty has risen by 37 million since Covid-19 hit, and it will rise another 25 million next year, according to estimates by the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation.

At the turn of each year recently, I’ve written a column arguing that the previous year was the best in human history, based on such metrics as the risk that a child will die or remain illiterate. I won’t be able to write such a column this winter, or perhaps for years to come.

I asked Mr Lowcock if Covid-19 is a setback for that era of progress, or a bookend.

“At a minimum this is going to be a significan­t blip,” he said. “If we’re not careful, it’s going to be worse than a blip. It could knock back for decades some of the progress that has been made.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Children watch as a healthcare worker checks the temperatur­e of residents at a slum in Mumbai, India.
REUTERS Children watch as a healthcare worker checks the temperatur­e of residents at a slum in Mumbai, India.
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