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I’m Worried About The Faith Of Next Generation Of Girls And Boys – Aisha Buhari

Aisha Buhari 3

Aisha Buhari, the wife of President Muhammadu Buhari has said that she is worried about the faith of the next generation of both girls and boys in Nigeria.
“As women and mothers of the nation, the faith of the next generation of both girls and boys occupies much of my thinking.”
Aisha Buhari, who spoke today, Friday, at the third annual conference organized by SHE Forum Africa with the theme: Regroup, Reboot and Remove the mask, called on women in leadership positions to be role models for younger generation of women leaders to achieve full inclusion of women.
The President’s wife, who was represented at the conference by the Dr. Toyin Saraki, wife of the Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki, said that women, including those in leadership positions, needed to come together to map out concrete plans on how to promote gender equality.
Aisha Buhari said that women also needed to work towards promoting health, safety, education and entrepreneurship for people in the work place, market and rural communities.
“To achieve gender inclusion, the world must break up and pay attention to the rights and opportunities of all human beings to reach and live up to their full potentials.”
She urged governments at the local and international levels, private and public organizations as well as individuals to work towards the realization of sustainable community development.
She said that such development would enhance empowerment of women, including the decision making process of women in the society, which she said would address the undeniable vices and social norms that make women and girls to be treated poorly.
She also urged business owners, civil society groups and institutions to proffer solutions to inequality in order to promote creative solutions and systemic change in the society.
Bisi Adeleye-Fayemi, a Gender and Development Specialist, said that there is need for Nigerian women to regroup, reboot and remove the mask because Nigeria was at war.
Adeleye-Fayemi said: “There is a war going on in Nigeria and the rights of women are greatly affected. Women are dying daily due to maternal mortality, women are being kidnapped and one out of three women experience some form of violence in her lifetime.
“Poverty, exclusion and abuse are things that have almost been normalized in our country.”
Adeleye-Fayemi said that Nigeria has been featured badly in the global gender economic measures and called on women to take their rightful place in the economy.
She said that in the Gender Economic Measure, Nigeria features very badly on most global indicators, adding: “the 2015 World Bank Gender Equality rated Nigeria as 158 out of 177 countries on the gender economic measures.
“The 2004 World Economic Forum on global gender report rated Nigeria 118 out of 178 counties, Nigeria presently feature as one of the 20 worst countries in the world to be a woman.’’
She said that issues on gender equality and women right have been undermined, and that culture, tradition and religion are used as an excuse to exclude women from attaining their full potentials.
The gender activist said that there is need for more feminist in the decision making process such as women with agenda for change, transformation and how to move women right issues forward.
“We have only six per cent of women in the National Assembly in Nigeria; eight states in Nigeria do not have women at the state Houses of Assembly.’’
She called on all stakeholders to ensure the effective implementation of gender policy framework on Violence Against Persons Act and National Gender Policy, among others. [myad]

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