<span class="gmail_quote">From: <b class="gmail_sendername">Vern Weitzel</b> <<a href="mailto:vern@coombs.anu.edu.au">vern@coombs.anu.edu.au</a>><br>crossposted from: "[health-vn discussion group]" <a href="mailto:health-vn@cairo.anu.edu.au">
health-vn@cairo.anu.edu.au</a><br></span><br>UNICEF UNDERSCORES TOLL CLIMATE CHANGE TAKES ON CHILDREN<br><br>Children are among those who are most devastated by climate change, the United<br>Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) announced today.
<br><br>"They pay with their health, their development and – too often – also with<br>their lives," Hilde Johnson,<br><"<a href="http://www.unicef.org/media/media_42174.html">http://www.unicef.org/media/media_42174.html
</a>">UNICEF Deputy Executive<br>Director, told reporters in New York.<br><br>Every year, three million children under the age of five die from<br>environment-linked diseases, such as diarrhoeal disease, respiratory infections
<br>and malaria, and the agency predicts that these numbers will rise with climate<br>change, she said.<br><br>Curbing climate change and UNICEF's top priority – to protect and support the<br>health, development and education of children – are closely interlinked. "Action
<br>to protect the environment will protect the basic rights of children," Ms.<br>Johnson noted.<br><br>Ms. Johnson voiced hope that the UN Climate Change Conference in Bali,<br>Indonesia, will produce a successful outcome.
<br><br>Acknowledging that UNICEF does not have an environmental mandate, she said the<br>agency nevertheless hopes that emissions reductions become a reality due to the<br>detrimental impact of global warming on children.
<br><br>The agency today also launched a new publication spotlighting the concerns of<br>children and youth about climate change.<br><br>Entitled "Climate Change and Children," it also outlines the dangers global<br>warming poses to children in the form of food insecurity, deforestation, lack of
<br>energy infrastructure, increasing frequency and severity of natural disasters,<br>disease and water scarcity.<br>