New Delhi, Feb 29 (IANS) With more than 50 percent of the world’s population now living in urban areas, urban migration has worsened the reach of social schemes on health and nutrition to children, said the UNICEF’s annual State of the World’s Children (SOTWC) report.

By 2050, two-thirds of the world population will be living in towns and cities as it will grow at a rate of 60 million per year, said the report, released Wednesday.
“Half of the world’s population lives in Asia, while China alone has an urban population of 630 million. Asia is home to 66 of the 100 fastest-growing urban areas (half of these in China),” the report said.
Mexico, US, Saudi Arabia, France, Brazil and Argentina were listed among countries with a high rate of 75 percent urban population.
The report presents a grim picture of life in urban areas. “Nearly 1 in 3 urban dwellers worldwide lived in a slum,” said the report which defines a slum as one lacking access to one or more: improved water, improved sanitation, security of tenure, durability of housing and sufficient living area.
“The number is rising to 6 in 10 in Africa. Over one billion children lived in urban areas,” said the report.
The situation was no better in India’s capital Delhi, where over 54 percent of children from slums attended primary school in 2004-2005, compared with 90 percent of children city-wide.
“Nearly 1.2 million children die before the age of 5 from diarrhoea alone. Improving access remains vital to reducing child mortality and morbidity,” the report said.
Urban violence and crime, stunted growth, malnutrition, poor elementary education, poor hygiene and sanitation were just some of the implications of life in urban slums.
“Sanitation is also failing to keep up with urban population growth. The number of urban people who defecate in the open increased from 140 million to 169 million between 1990 and 2008,” it said.
The UNICEF recommends ensuring urban planning and infrastructure development meets the needs of children in urban slums, promoting partnership between government and voluntary organisations, and identification and removal of barriers against inclusion of children.