The Statistics of Shame
Afghanistan´s child mortality rate is second from the bottom, only Sierra Leone´s is worse. A Nepali woman is more likely to die at childbirth than a woman in Niger. The percentage of Bangladeshi children who are underweight because they don´t have enough to eat is the highest in the world-much worse than, say, Somalia. Even Sri Lanka, a country that was regarded as a model of development, is slipping.
Measured by the standard parameters for gauging human quality of life, southern Asia is right down there with the impoverished, dirt poor and war-ravaged African states. Shocking and shameful as these statistics may be, South Asia´s misery stands out even more starkly because neighbouring East Asian countries are doing so well. Countries like Thailand, Malaysia and South Korea, which till 40 years ago were at the same level of development as some South Asian countries, now have education and health statistics at par with industrialised countries.