The Indian government ignores deaths of forty-three children

INDIA: The government ignores deaths of forty-three children due to
malnutrition in Madhya Pradesh

Dear friends,

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has received information
from a human rights group, Spandan Samaj Seva Samiti (Spandan) in
Madhya Pradesh (MP). It appears that the state government did not
take any action, but rather denied 27 child malnutrition deaths,
occurring within a two month period, in August and September 2008.
Previous to this, 12 children had died of malnutrition and later, six
more. All the families of the deceased children continue to struggle.
There has not been any improvement in their living conditions,
besides which government services for the poor were recently
withdrawn.

CASE DETAILS:

27 children died of malnutrition in Khalwa Block:

Chhotu (four years old) and Sagar (six months old) died in August and
September 2008, respectively. Chhotu had diarrhoea and weight loss,
while Sagar had a respiratory infection but both suffering from
malnutrition before they died. Their father Mr. Suraj lives in
Mohalkhari village, Khalwa Block, Khandwa district has two acres of
non-irrigated farmland which is not enough to provide his children
with sufficient life-sustaining food to eat.

Due to the illness of the two children, Suraj could not manage to
cultivate his land and was forced to borrow 2000 Rupees (USD 40) at
an interest of 50% for their treatment. The family had an Antyodaya
Anna Yojana (AAY) card earlier which is a public food distribution
card for the poorest, which has been replaced with the Below the
Poverty Line (BPL). The family is getting poorer, but now they have
to pay more to get rice and wheat from the ration shop. The family
had also borrowed grain which they have to pay back double. The job
card for the family says that the elder daughter has been working for
two weeks, but does not clearly show the specific time period.

In this village, five children, including these two, had suffered
from lack of sufficient and nutritious food and clean water at home.
As a result they died from malnutrition and some diseases aggravated
by malnutrition in August 2008.

In the following month, Mr. Shivram living in Medhapani village of
Khalwa Block lost his eighteen-month old child Shivani. The infant
suffered from fever and respiratory infection and malnourishment.
Shivram is a migrant and a landless farm labourer who finds it
difficult to provide food on a daily basis for his family. He had to
borrow 1000 Rupees (USD 20) to buy grain as he has no ration card.

In the same month, Ravishanker, a three-year old died. He had wasted
away with fever and diarrhoea before his death. His father Vishram is
also a landless labourer but has neither a ration card nor a job card.

Besides these four deaths, 23 children died of malnutrition with
symptoms such as fever, diarrhoea, respiratory infection, blisters,
swelling, from August to November in 13 villages in Khalwa Block
alone. All these symptoms are well known signs of malnutrition and
can aggravate the effects of malnutrition as well.

The World Health Organization (WHO) report “MANAGEMENT OF THE CHILD
WITH A SERIOUS INFECTION OR SEVERE MALNUTRITION - Guidelines for care
at the first-referral level in developing countries” (2000), clearly
state that malnourished children have signs and symptoms such as
wasting, oedema, airway and breathing difficulties, dehydration from
diarrhoea, infections of the ear, throat, skin, pneumonia, mouth
ulcers.

Action from the government:

According to the report submitted by Spandan, after the malnutrition
deaths were publically reported, the administrative authority
provided relief for the children in the villages. Hundreds of
children were brought to the Nutrition Rehabilitation Centres (NRC;
Bal Shakti Kendras) and the Shaktiman project was introduced to 299
Child Care Centre (Anganwadi centre; AWC) all over the district. The
NRC is a welfare scheme to treat malnourished children living in
remote forest villages. The Shaktiman project was launched in 2007 to
ensure nutrition for children with a focus on predominantly tribal
areas in MP. UNICEF India also provided skilled human resources and
Ready to Use Therapeutic Food (RUTF) for malnourished children.

Seven PDS shops in these thirteen villages used to sell only 20
kilograms of rice and wheat until the children’s deaths occurred.
According to guidelines of the central government, the state
government ordered that every PDS shop must provide 35 kilograms of
rice (15kilogrmas) and wheat (20 kilograms) per month for card
holders since 2003. Only after the children died did the district
Collector order that the shops should open throughout the month and
provide 35 kilograms of grain.

All these relief measures did not last long. Spandan was told that
the main reason why some programs for the children’s nutrition were
withdrawn is the limited funds which were only meant to tide over the
emergency situation. The emergency treatment and nutrition supply did
not prevent another malnutrition death in this Block. Two-year-old
Tulsi Bisram died a few days after she received treatment at the NRC
for only eight days because she was not provided any supplemental
food after coming back home in November 2008.

According to Spandan, all seven PDS shops currently do not open
everyday and provide merely 20 kilograms of wheat. After providing
some relief for the children, the authorities did not monitor the PDS
shops or AWC which is the primary service to ensure food security. The
children have been abandoned again with only a few months provision
which resulted in the deaths of six more children from malnutrition.

Six more children deaths in Khalwa Block:

According to the report conducted by Action Aid India with the
cooperation of Spandan after the above 27 children’s deaths, six more
children died of malnutrition in three villages of Khalwa Block
between October and December 2008.

Tulsi Bisram of is one of the six children who died even after
visiting the NRC. She received treatment for eight days at the NRC
and was also given RUTF which improved her condition. However, Tulsi
died a few days after she came back home where the family could not
provide continued adequate food and nutrition. Her death reflects the
fact that temporary treatment and health care neither saves lives nor
ensures food security in the long term.

Tulsi has never been provided medical care by the AWC which is far
away from her house. No children in Tulsi’s community have visited
the AWC since it is not in the community area. No one visited the
community for regular medical check-ups for the mothers and their
infants either.

None of the deceased six children’s families have AAY cards or BPL
cards. However, all these six families pleaded that they have been
suffering from lack of food and some had to borrow money for food.
Many of them are landless or merely have non-irrigated small scale
farms which people finds difficult to produce food for everyday
consumption. In particular, the rainy season when most of the
children died is the hardest time of the year.

Additional Comments:

Despite the government providing immediate relief for the emergency,
the children died of malnutrition anyway. It demonstrates that
emergency treatment cannot prevent malnutrition deaths and cannot
ensure food security. Unless those most vulnerable are continuously
provided with the basic needs of food and health care, which should
be guaranteed by the public health institutes and public food
distribution, will people’s livelihood be improved.

The public services of food and health care for the poor such as PDS,
AWC, Primary Health Centre and Public hospital do not aim to provide
for emergencies, but aim consistently to ensure food security as well
as to prevent child malnutrition. They have been developed since India
had ratified the International Covenant on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights (ICESCR) in 1979. The right to food is a fundamental
right in India.

The Supreme Court Order states that the PDS shop keepers
authorizations should be cancelled for the following reasons. They do
not keep their shops open throughout the month, fail to provide grain
to BPL families only at BPL rates, make false entries on the BPL
cards, engage in black-marketing, and siphon away grain to the open
market and hand over ration shops to non-authorised
persons/organisations.

The Public Distribution System (Control) Order 2001 also puts down in
law that any person who contravenes any provision of the order will be
punished under Section 7 of the Essential Commodities Act (ECA) 1955.
The punishment is imprisonment for a term of not less than three
months which could be extended up to seven years together with a
fine. Furthermore, Session 9 of the ECA 1955 stipulates that if any
person makes a false statement in any book, account, record,
declaration or other document they shall face imprisonment for a term
which may be extended to five years and subject to pay a fine.

However, the PDS shops in this area have never been punished which
led them to infringe on the Orders again.

There is a more important issue regarding food security in tribes.
According to the Supreme Court Order dated 2 May 2003, six "priority
groups’’ including primitive tribes would be entitled to AAY cards.
In addition, in April 2004, the Court asked the Central government to
direct the State governments to accelerate the issue of AAY cards
especially to primitive tribes. Some tribes in Khalwa Block such as
Korku have neither AAY cards nor BPL cards. They do not have priority
for AAY card since they are not officially identified as a primitive
tribe. They have been demanding to be entitled to AAY card as they
are tribes and vulnerable groups in food security.

As they have been continuously exposed to malnutrition and food
insecurity, in September 2008, the Supreme Court Commissioners and
Advisors have recommended to the state government that whoever has no
ration card and have applied in this Block be entitled to AAY cards.

The AWC or public health institutes are not working efficiently since
the poor in the area cannot access the services due to distance or the
absence of easy access. Many of the villagers go to see a private
doctor, who is more accessible than public health institutes, even
though they have to pay more besides the cost of taking out a loan
for the same.

Despite all these failures of the government service for the poor,
they attempt to avoid responsibility by saying that the children did
not die of malnutrition but of diseases. However, what the government
called ‘diseases’ are all the symptoms and signs of malnutrition
according to the WHO.

Furthermore, the government blames parental ignorance because they
belong to a tribal community which holds superstitious beliefs. This
has nothing to do with the malnourishment of their children.

In January 2009, Spandan submitted a letter with the relevant reports
to the Khandwa district Collector and responsible government
authorities who have yet responded.

SUGGESTED ACTION:

Please send a letter to the authorities mentioned below expressing
your concern about malnutrition deaths in Khandwa district of MP.

The AHRC has also written a separate letter to the UN Special
Rapporteur on the Right to Food calling for intervention.

To support this appeal, please click here:
<Support Urgent Appeals >

SAMPLE LETTER:

Dear __________,

INDIA: Please ensure food security to stop malnutrition deaths in
Khandwa district, Madhya Pradesh

Name of the deceased children in Khalwa Block, Khandwa district,
Madhya Pradesh:

  1. Chhotu Suraj, four years old, died in August 2008, Mohalkhari
    village

  2. Sagar Suraj, six months old, died on 10 September 2008, Mohalkhari
    village

  3. Gudiya Shersingh, fifteen days old, died in August 2008,
    Mohalkhari village

  4. Virendra Bihari, twelve months old, died in August 2008,
    Mohalkhari village

  5. Child of Mr. Sukai, eight days old, died in August 2008,
    Mohalkhari village

  6. Nandini Kamalsingh, eighteen months old, died in August 2008,
    Salidana village

  7. Lalita Rajaram, eighteen months old, died in August 2008, Salidana
    village

  8. Child of Ms. Pramila, eight days old, died in August 2008,
    Salidana village

  9. Child of Mr. Sushila, eleven days old, died in August 2008,
    Salidana village

  10. Sravan Munna, three years old, died in August 2008, Ambada
    village

  11. Kriparam Mnasaram, three years old, died in August 2008, Ambada
    village

  12. Child of Ramlal, nine days old, died in September 2008, Ambada
    village

  13. Manisha Onkar, twelve months old, died in August 2008, Chimaipur
    village

  14. Umesh Shivram, eighteen months old, died in August 2008,
    Chimaipur village

  15. Mukesh Patel, two years old, died in September 2008, Chimaipur
    village

  16. Kalai Shantulaal, two years old, died in September 2008, Jhirpa
    village

  17. Ramvilas Patiram, two years old, died in September 2008, Jhirpa
    village

  18. Child of Mr. Shivlal Mongia, two days old, died in July 2008,
    Chattu-Battu village

  19. Child of Mr. Shantulal, eight days, died in August 2008, Jhinjari
    village

  20. Sevti Rammu, fifteen months old, died in August 2008, Garbedi
    village

  21. Jamvanti Ramdev Bhau, four years old, died in September 2008,
    Sunderdev village

  22. Rajesh Ramesh, twenty days old, died in September 2008, Langoti
    village

  23. Ravishanker Amarsingh, three years old, died in September 2008,
    Jamnapur village

  24. Susham Sukhram, eighteen months old, died in September 2008,
    Jamnapur village

  25. Kusum Balaram, five years old, died in September 2008, Hasanpura
    village

  26. Karina Harnath, three months old, died in August 2008, Medhapani
    village

  27. Shivani Shivram, eighteen months, died in September 2008,
    Medhapani village

  28. Muuna Sobhram, 21 days, died in October 2008, Salidhana village

  29. Vivek Pratap, four years old, died in November 2008, Salidhana
    village

  30. Tulsi Bisram, two years old, died in November 2008, Mathni
    village

  31. Samoti Keshar Singh, three months, died in November 2008, Mathni
    village

  32. Golu Chhotelal, ten days, died in December 2008, Mathni village

  33. Badal Kailash, ten months, died in November 2008, Bawdiya village

The PDS shops to be monitored:

  1. PDS Shop at Roshni covering Roshni, Mohalkhari, Salidhana and
    Ambada villages

  2. PDS shop at Maujwadi covering Mojwadi, Chimaipur, Garbedi and
    Jamnapur villages

  3. PDS shop at Jhinjari covering Jhinjari and Chattu-Battu villages

  4. PDS shop at Sunderdev covering Sunderdev village

  5. PDS shop at Patajan covering Patajan and Langoti villages

  6. PDS shop at Dabhiya covering Dabhia and Medhapani villages

  7. PDS shop at Tigriya covering Tigriya and Hasanpura villages

I am writing to express my concern regarding the deaths of 33
children caused by malnutrition with attendant symptoms of fever,
diarrhoea, respiratory infection, blister, swelling, from late July
to December 2008.

The deceased children lived in the villages predominantly inhabited
by tribal communities who have suffered from food insecurity caused
by lack of livelihood and failure of public service for the poor. In
particular, the rainy season, when the children died, is the hardest
time to manage food provision and safe drinking water resulting in
malnutrition and sickness every year.

According to the report conducted by the local group and Action Aid
India, most of the families are either landless or small scale farm
owners of non-irrigated plots. Many of them have no job card. The
ration card under the Public Food Distribution System (PDS) has not
been issued properly to the tribal communities. According to the
Supreme Court Order 2003 and 2004, the primitive tribes are one of
the priority groups to be entitled to Antyodaya Anna Yojana (AAY)
card for the poorest among them.

I am informed that some tribes such as Korku living in Khalwa Block
have not yet officially been indentified as a primitive tribe
although they have been demanding on it. In September 2008, the
Supreme Court Commissioner and Advisors have suggested to the state
government that whoever has no ration card and have applied be
entitled to the AAY card or Below the Poverty Lind (BPL) card as they
have been continuously exposed to malnutrition and food deprivation.
Despite, I am further informed that many of them have no ration card.

I have learned that until the children died, the PDS shops in the
villages opened once or twice a week and merely provided 20 kilograms
of grain. I am aware that the shops must provide 35 kilograms of rice
and wheat per a month to the BPL card holders by the state government
order of 2003.

I have studied that the Supreme Court Order states that the PDS
shopkeepers should be cancelled if they do not keep their shops open
throughout the month and fail to provide grain to BPL families
strictly at BPL rates and no higher, make false entries in the BPL
cards, and engage in black-marketing or siphoning away of grain to
the open market and hand over such ration shops to other
persons/organizations. The Public Distribution System (Control) Order
2001 also puts down in law that any person who contravenes any
provision of the order will be punished under Section 7 of the
Essential Commodities Act (ECA) 1955. However, I am informed that the
shops have not been punished under these orders so far.

I am informed that after the children’s deaths, the administration
provided relief for the children in the villages only on an emergency
basis. The Collector ordered that the PDS shops should open daily and
provide 35 kilograms of rice and wheat. However, the temporary
treatment and nutrition supply did not last long because of limited
funds meant to tide over the emergency. In addition, all seven PDS
shops covering the thirteen villages where the 27 children died,
currently do not open every day and merely provide 20 kilograms of
wheat.

As the temporary assistance was withdrawn, six more children died of
malnutrition with similar symptoms in the same Block in November and
December 2008. One of six, two-year-old Tulsi Bisram died a few days
after she received rations for eight days at the Nutrition
Rehabilitation Centres (NRC.) She was also given Ready to Use
Therapeutic Food (RUTF) by UNICEF India which improved her heath
condition temporarily but failed to eventually prevent her death of
malnutrition. Her demise reflects the fact that temporary provisions
and health care do not prevent death without long-term treatment and
food provision at home.

Tulsi has never been provided medical care by the AWC which is far
away from her house. No children in Tulsi’s community have visited
the AWC since it is not in the community area. No one visited the
community for regular medical check-up for the mothers and their
infants.

I have learned that none of the deceased six children’s families have
AAY cards or BPL cards meant for food distribution to the poor. All
these six families pleaded that they have been suffering from lack of
food and some even had to borrow money to buy food.

I am of the opinion that the public services on food and health care
for the poor such as PDS, AWC (child care centre), Public health
institutes do not aim to provide only for emergencies. They aim to
ensure food security as well as prevent child malnutrition routinely.
These services had been developed since India ratified the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
(ICESCR) in 1979. The right to food is a fundamental right in India.

Despite all these failures of government service for the poor, I am
informed that the government attempts to avoid its responsibility by
saying that the children did not die of malnutrition but died of
diseases. However, what the government called ‘diseases’ are all the
symptoms and signs of malnutrition according to reports of the WHO
published in 2000.

I am of the opinion that when the government officially denies
children’s malnutrition, they should provide rational and scientific
assessments, examining the social and economic background and the
government’s administration of a public system for them, also
suggested by the WHO.

Further, the government blames the parents for their ignorance and
superstitious beliefs since they belong to a tribal community, which
has nothing to do with the malnourishment of children. I am of the
opinion that the duty of the government is not to blame the poor or
tribal community’s culture but to provide government services equally
to all.

In the light of this, I urge you to intervene by taking the following
concrete steps to prevent further deaths and ensure food security in
Khalwa Block:

  1. Issue AAY cards to all the families who lost their children due to
    malnutrition

  2. Visit the villages and issue AAY cards or BPL cards and job cards
    to other families in the villages who do not have adequate livelihood
    and suffer from lack of food in particular to tribal community
    families.

  3. Build Child Care Centres (Anganwadi Centre) in order to provide
    regular nutrition and health care for the children in all the
    victims’ communities

  4. Monitor the PDS shops and punish whoever infringes the Supreme
    Court Order or PDS (control) Order for food distribution for the poor

  5. Ensure compliance of all government authorities to provide public
    service

  6. Above all, support the villagers so that they can produce enough
    food on their own by allotting farm land to the landless and
    providing irrigation facilities which will be the ultimate way to
    ensure food security

I am looking forward to your immediate action and will keep
monitoring this issue.

Yours sincerely,


PLEASE SEND YOUR LETTERS TO:

  1. Renuka Chowdhury

Minister of Women and Child Development

Government of India

INDIA

Fax: +91 11 2307 4054

E-mail: [email protected]

  1. Justice Mr. Balakrishnan

Chief Justice of India

Through the Office of the Registrar General

Supreme Court of India

1 Tilak Marg, New Delhi

INDIA

Fax: +91 11 2338 3792

E-mail: [email protected]

  1. Principal Secretary

Ministry of Health & Family Welfare

Nirman Bhavan

Maulana Azad Road

New Delhi - 110011

INDIA

Fax: +91 11 2306 1751

E-mail: [email protected]

  1. Mr. Shivraj Singh Chouhan

Chief Minister

Madhya Pradesh

INDIA

Fax: +91 733 244 1781

  1. R. C. Sahni

Chief Secretary

Government of Madhya Pradesh

Mantralaya,

Bhopal 462 004

Madhya Pradesh

INDIA

E-mail: [email protected]

  1. S.B. Singh

The Collector

Khandwa District

Madhya Pradesh

450001

INDAI

Fax: +91 733 22 6265

E-mail: [email protected]

  1. Country Director

World Food Programme

2 Poorvi Marg, Vasant Vihar

New Delhi 110057

INDIA

Fax: +91 112 615 0019

E-mail: [email protected]

  1. UNICEF

73 Lodi Estates

New Delhi 110 003

INDIA

Fax: + 91 11 2462 7521 / 11 2469 1410

E-mail: [email protected]

Thank you.

Urgent Appeals Programme

Asian Human Rights Commission ([email protected] mailto:[[email protected]](http://us.mc1114.mail.yahoo.com/mc/[email protected])
)

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43? whats the big deal? Over 6000 children die in India every day! Reason, Hunger… Link below.

Re: The Indian government ignores deaths of forty-three children

india has serious problems of poverty and starvation. but i believe india is on the right track, much has changed in the last 10 years than any other decade since independence. clearly a lot more must be done before india can live up to its true potential.

Be warned, very disturbing Videos on The New York Times.

India struggling with Hunger

India Struggles With Hunger - The New York Times#