One grant of Euro 39.5 million will help infants and mothers to reduce mortality and malnutrition rates across 13 states, the UNICEF said.
The second grant of Euro 20.7 million will enable children across 10 states to receive quality education and benefit from a government scheme that provides a safe environment for children living in difficult circumstances, it said.
The IKEA Foundation is UNICEF's biggest corporate donor globally. Since 2002, UNICEF programmes funded by the IKEA Foundation have impacted the lives of over 74 million people living in 15 states in India.
India accounts for more than 20 per cent of the child deaths and 38 per cent of the chronically undernourished children in the world. This is largely due to a lack of access to good quality, essential health services, and insufficient nutrition, water, sanitation and hygiene services for children under two and their mothers.
In India, more than 80 million children drop out before completing eight years of schooling and over eight million children are out of school, a UNICEF statement said.
