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Home International Customs

World Bank grants $300m to Bangladesh for nutrition programme

byCustoms Today Report
11/02/2015
in International Customs
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DHAKA: Bangladesh signed a $300 million financing agreement with the World Bank Group to ensure proper nutrition for children by financing mothers from poor families.

Under the programme, about 600,000 poor mothers with children below the age of five and pregnant women from 42 upazilas in the northern parts of the country will receive monthly payments through biometric-enabled Bangladesh Post Office cash cards.

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In return, the women will have to go for regular visits for antenatal care services, child nutrition and development awareness sessions and monitoring of the child’s weight and height, the WB said.

Ensuring adequate nutrition prenatally and in the first two years of life helps maximise a child’s intelligence and brain development and enables higher level of learning through childhood and into adulthood, Johannes Zutt, WB’s country director, said.

The project will help poor mothers learn how to improve the nutrition of their young children and also provide an income supplement to enable them better to act on that learning, he added.

In spite of the country’s record of reducing child mortality, it is still among the 10 countries with the highest prevalence of malnutrition, the WB said.

Some 41 percent of children below the age of five are stunted, according to the World Health Organisation.

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