Daily Trust

Internatio­nal Day of the Girl-Child

-

The United Nations has dedicated every October 11 as the Internatio­nal Day of the Girl-Child, a strategy adopted by the global body to draw attention to the challenges facing female adolescent­s all over the world. In devoting this day to the issues of the girl-child, UNICEF has argued that “every child deserves to reach her or his full potential, but gender inequaliti­es in their lives and in the lives of those who care for them hinder this reality.”

Some of the statistics found on the organisati­on’s website lament that “every year, 12 million girls are married before their 18th birthday. Globally, 1 in 5 girls becomes a mother before that age; nearly 7,000 adolescent girls aged 15 to 24 are infected with HIV every week; [and that] 98 million girls who should be in secondary school are not.”

Though UNICEF’s statistics are based on a global survey, there is no doubt that the findings resonate in Nigeria. The girl-child in Nigeria, especially those born in rural areas, often gets married at a very early age and suffers from a poor basic education system and hostile cultural practices. In some extreme cases, like the insurgency in the North-East, the girlchild’s desire for education can be frustrated by insecurity. The abduction of schoolgirl­s in Chibok, Borno State and Dapchi in Yobe State by Boko Haram factions is a clear evidence that the girl-child’s desire for education can be aborted by insecurity.

The failure of the primary health care delivery system in Nigeria negatively affects the girl-child. In both rural areas and urban centres, they do not have access to qualified medical personnel who should handle the peculiar health challenges of the girl-child. They are, therefore, exposed to unwanted pregnancie­s and all sorts of infections, the most devastatin­g of which is HIV. For some, it is the life-threatenin­g vesico-vaginal fistula (VVF) which leaves them with a serious disability after childbirth due to the fact that they are exposed to the excruciati­ng experience of childbirth at a tender age.

Also, there is the nagging crime of rape which is on the increase across the world. In most cases, the victims of rape are the adolescent girl-child. It is shocking that this crime is committed by adults or even elderly persons against young girls, leaving them bruised both physically and psychologi­cally for life. Nigeria has had more than its fair share of this crime, with many unthinkabl­e stories of incest and sex-slavery.

The girl-child faces numerous challenges. But they all represent a challenge to government, women groups and the civil society movements in the country. Government has come up with many initiative­s that should encourage the girl-child to pursue knowledge up to the junior secondary school level. Apart from the Universal Basic Education policy, government has establishe­d girls-only schools across the country. However, this policy design has been implemente­d half-heartedly, and schools lack qualified teachers and necessary infrastruc­ture that would make learning impactful. Under such circumstan­ces, the years the girl-child spends at school is considered as a waste because of the low quality of educationa­l attainment and the fact that they would not have acquired skills that expose them to job opportunit­ies. For those who press on to complete the senior secondary school, the story is not usually too different. As a result, many parents would quickly give out their daughters in marriage at the slightest opportunit­y to do so.

Government should step up its commitment to the quality of basic education. Also, primary health care hospitals should be funded and made functional so that the girl-child can easily access medicare necessary for their delicate and peculiar health issues. The executive and judiciary should ensure that the Child Rights Act is implemente­d all over the country, and child abuse, especially rape, is visited with severe punishment. These measures, and many more, if taken seriously by the authoritie­s will help to meliorate the plight of the girl child in Nigeria.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria