Sunday 6 March 2011

India has maximum hungry kids


India has the highest number of underweight, stunted and wasted children, says a World Bank report titled ‘The World Bank in India.’
Quoting from a World Health Organisation (WHO) report, the Bank said that India had 49 per cent of the world’s underweight children, 34 per cent of the stunted and 46 per cent of its wasted (irreversibly damaged) kids.
“The incidence of under nourishment among children is the highest in India. Despite relatively high economic growth in the last few years India and other South Asian countries have the highest rates of hunger,” the Bank said.

The rate of impoverishment varies in the different regions of India and among various population groups, with the poorest among the scheduled castes and tribes bearing the brunt.
Among Indian states Bihar and Jharkhand have the highest rate of hunger. But the condition is no better even in the so called prosperous cities, with a full one-third of the children being underweight.
India has not been able to make any significant progress in tackling hunger in the last decade and it continues to be the epicenter of world malnourishment, the WB report said.
Although poverty has been cited as the cause of malnourishment in India, the recent high growth has not had any effect upon the hunger situation in India.

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MY PRIDE DID YOU KNOW THAT.......

India is one of the oldest civilizations in the world, spanning a period of more than 4000 years, and witnessing the fusion of several customs and traditions, which are reflective of the rich culture and heritage of the Country.

The history of the nation gives a glimpse into the magnanimity of its evolution - from a Country reeling under colonialism, to one of the leading economies in the global scenario within a span of fifty years. More than anything, the nationalistic fervour of the people is the contributing force behind the culmination of such a development. This transformation of the nation instills a sense of national pride in the heart of every Indian within the Country and abroad, and this section is a modest attempt at keeping its flame alive.

Sanskrit is considered as the mother of all higher languages.

This is because it is the most precise and therefore the suitable language for computer software (a report in Forbes magazine, July 1987)