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Video editor: Puneet Bhatia
Sahil is a young, malnourished kid from the village of Chak Jamaluddinpur in east UP's Azamgarh. Ever since the first outbreak of COVID-19 in India in March 2020, Sahil and his 5-year-old sister Sandhya have had to sleep hungry on many, many nights - having eaten just one meal in the entire day.
At 17 kg and 109 cm, the effects of malnourishment are showing starkly on 8-year-old Sahil's health.
In the village of Bhurkuraha in Jaunpur, 4-year-old Sejal Kashyap has suffered a similar fate. She now fails on the key indicators of nourishment - and is both underweight and stunted for her age.
"Sejal weighs 12 kg and is 91 cm tall. For her age (4 years and 9 months), she is both underweight and severely stunted", says Maneka Prajapati, the local anganwadi worker in Bhurkuraha.
In this ground report from east UP, we find out how severely the pandemic has intensified UP's malnutrition crisis, and the reasons behind it.
As per central government data from November 2020, Uttar Pradesh has the highest number of children with Severe Acute Malnourishment (SAM).
Out of 9.28 lakh kids in India with SAM, UP alone accounts for 3.98 lakh. That’s 43% of the national figure.
We meet 8-year-old Sahil and his mother Suryakanti in a Musahar hamlet in the village of Bhurkuraha, in east UP's Jaunpur. They are staying at Suryakanti's paternal abode for a few days.
Suryakanti explains why her family has had to sleep on an empty stomach on far too often an occasion since the onset of the pandemic, "First, there was no work during the lockdown. Then, the rations we received were not enough to feed the family for the entire month. Our rations for the month got over in a week. We had to buy our supplies after that."
But given the economic distress due to the pandemic, that hasn’t always been easy. As a result, Suryakanti and her kids were forced to resort to having only one meal a day.
With schools shut due to COVID-19, her son Sahil also missed the important nutrition he would otherwise get from his school midday meal. "When his school was shut due to the pandemic, even the mid-day meal wasn’t available," laments Suryakanti.
Sahil dreams of a day his family won't have to rub their bellies and go to sleep hungry.
He tells us, "When I grow up, I want to become a doctor. I will give people medicines and earn a living. And when I start earning, my mother will never have to go hungry again."
He adds, "I will earn enough to manage our expenses, and will take care of my family. If anyone in my family asks for money, I will give them. We will be able to sustain ourselves on our own."
Sejal's mother Savita Kashyap reflects on the agony of seeing her children go hungry, and on having to turn her kids away when they come to her with their empty stomachs aching.
She asks despondently, "People say that she is unable to feed her kids - but is there anything I can do?"
As UNICEF notes, "A lack of food and nutrients directly affects the growth of children, causing irreversible damage to their bodies and brains. They live with the effects of malnutrition for the rest of their lives because their bodies and brains have not developed as they could."
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