Audio By Carbonatix
More than half the world's children are at risk of poverty, conflict and discrimination against girls, according to a report by Save the Children.
The charity's second End of Childhood index says more than 1.2 billion children face these threats, with 153 million facing all three.
While the global situation has improved compared with last year, the charity says progress is not fast enough.
The report comes ahead of International Children's Day on 1 June.
Save the Children's index says one billion children live in countries rife with poverty, about 240 million in countries affected by conflict, and 575 million girls live in countries where discrimination against women is common.
"Because of who they are and where they live, these children risk being robbed of their childhoods and future potential," the report says.
Image copyrightAFP/GETTY
Image captionDespite improvements globally, Save the Children say more needs to be done
According to the survey, released on Wednesday, the situation for children has improved in 95 of 175 countries surveyed, but deteriorated in about 40 nations.
Countries are ranked by a score system based on how much children in each country face death, malnutrition, lack of education and being forced into marriage, motherhood or work.
Singapore and Slovenia are joint first top of the childhood index rankings, followed by Norway and Sweden in joint third and Finland fifth.
At the bottom of the index is Niger, along with Mali and the Central African Republic - with eight of the bottom ten nations in west or central Africa.
Save the Children also point out that despite their dominance in economics and military might, the US (36th), Russia (37th) and China (40th) all trail countries in Western Europe.

You may also be interested in:
- The girl who sabotaged her own wedding
- Yemen's child soldiers
- Is a child bride really married every seven seconds?

The charity identifies 10 key trends that they say require concerted action.
Rising adolescent pregnancies and rates of marriage for girls under 18, an increasing gap between rich and poor countries, worsening survival rates in sub-Saharan Africa, child labour and stalled efforts to increase education worldwide are all concerns, as well as the huge number of displaced persons worldwide.
The charity says 20 people are displaced every minute due to conflict or persecution.
In February, a Save the Children report said one in six children now live in a conflict zone, while in 2016 another report by the charity said one girl under 15 is married every seven seconds.
The charity has come under scrutiny for allegations of sexual misconduct amid a wider scandal of Western charity workers actions worldwide.
Latest Stories
-
President Mahama directs Finance Ministry to disburse $78m for completion of Takoradi–Agona-Nkwanta road
16 minutes -
Interior Minister lauds NIA staff for dedication, pledges continued government support
19 minutes -
First Atlantic Bank will run a “proper and decent business” to protect shareholder value – CEO
50 minutes -
First Atlantic Bank targets African expansion as IPO strengthens capital, governance
58 minutes -
First Atlantic Bank CEO attributes IPO and GSE listing decision to renewed confidence in Ghana’s economy
1 hour -
GPL 2025/26: Bechem United end All Blacks 6-game unbeaten run
1 hour -
Eggs fly off shelves as shoppers throng The Multimedia Group’s X’mas Egg Market on final day
2 hours -
Bankable energy: Why Africa’s downstream sector is the next global investment frontier
2 hours -
Working Capital Management: Do’s and don’ts to consider for 2026
3 hours -
Gold Fields Ghana Foundation empowers youth through education and skills training
3 hours -
Gov’t hid study showing lithium refining can’t be done in Ghana- Bright Simons
3 hours -
Salah apologised to Liverpool team-mates after explosive interview – Jones
3 hours -
Enimil Ashon: Malawi president flies to UK for virtual meeting!
4 hours -
CSOs commend gov’t for revoking L.I. 2462, call for stronger forest protection measures
4 hours -
ECG activates standby teams to manage festive-season electricity load in Ashanti region
4 hours
