G8 Leaders Take Steps in the Right Direction

G8 Leaders Take Steps in the Right Direction
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The G8 2010 is over and World Vision believes the summit should rightly be hailed for the launch of the Canadian-led Muskoka Initiative, but is tainted by low promises and low expectations.

Robert Zachritz, director of advocacy for World Vision in the United States, analyzes the results from Canada:

We believe the millions of preventable child deaths each year are the greatest silent emergency of our time, so we're pleased to see the G8 leaders have taken it seriously this year by acknowledging the lack of progress being made. But for many of the 24,000 children who will die today before reaching their fifth birthdays, the sense of urgency is missing.

This G8 has promised to save 1.3 million children through its Muskoka Initiative. World Vision will work to ensure this happens -- and continue to push global leaders to address the remaining millions still at risk.

With economic uncertainty and the massive Gulf oil spill taking a significant toll in the U.S., it's not a shock that President Obama and other leaders shied away from greater commitments at this summit -- but it is shortsighted. Investing in global child and maternal health yields a high return for a tiny fraction of the sums spent so far on financial bailouts.

World leaders are rightly focused this week on global economic challenges. What they need to realize is that saving lives and preventing illnesses will fuel productivity and growth in developing economies, adding to global prosperity over the long term.

A set of simple, low-cost interventions like bed nets, handwashing, immunizations and adequate nutrition can save at least 2.5 million of the 8.8 million children who die needlessly every year, according to World Vision's analysis.

The G8 has taken some important steps in the right direction of accountability by increasing their commitment to transparency. They are going to annually publish their aid figures, making it easier for voters and civil society to hold them to account.

Looking forward, success is not in communiques or meetings. It's in the delivery: of strong health services, of more health workers, of immunization programs, and of healthful meals for children.

Facts:

In this G8 summit's signature Muskoka Initiative, the G8 heads-of-state meeting in Canada announced a pledge of an additional $5 billion over five years for maternal and child health programs globally.

  • Last year, 8.8 million children and at least 350,000 women died, most from preventable causes. Malnutrition and lack of access to basic health care underlie many of these deaths. Pneumonia, diarrhea, and malaria were top killers of children, while women die in pregnancy and childbirth due to lack of food and health care.
  • World Vision is a Christian humanitarian organization that has committed1.5 billion over five years to address child and maternal health across the nearly 100 countries in which it works. For more on the Child Health Now campaign and World Vision at the summit, see http://www.worldvision.org/content.nsf/about/emergency-presskit-G8-poverty

Contact:
Rachel Wolff
Geraldine Ryerson-Cruz 202.615.2608

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