The Guardian (Nigeria)

Obaseki, Bagudu, Okei- Odumakin Seek Collaborat­ion, New Strategies To End Violence Against Women

- By Ijeoma Thomas- Odia

THE Edo First Lady, Mrs. Betsy Obaseki, her Kebbi State counterpar­t, Dr. Zainab Shinkafi Bagudu and human rights activist and founder of Women Arise, Dr. Joe Okei- Odumakin, have called for joint action by relevant stakeholde­rs to end all forms of Gender- Based Violence in the country and prosecute all suspected sexual offenders.

They made this call at a public lecture organised by Women Arise and the United Nations Informatio­n Center ( UNIC) to mark the commenceme­nt of 16 days of activism to end violence against women and girls in Nigeria.

Mrs. Obaseki, who was guest speaker at the virtual summit, urged all stakeholde­rs to work collective­ly with relevant government authoritie­s, especially law enforcemen­t agencies, to stem the tide of gender- based violence and uphold the rights of women.

With the theme, ‘ Orange the World: Fund, Respond, Prevent, Collect’, the event was held in commemorat­ion of the Internatio­nal Day for the Eliminatio­n of Violence

Against Women, marked every November 25 by the United Nations and its sister agencies.

Obaseki however called for more legislatio­ns and concerted efforts to fund, collect, respond and prevent genderbase­d violence, noting that the COVID- 19 pandemic brought about spike in incidents of violence against women as a result of confinemen­ts, school closure, unemployme­nt and hunger.

She said that apart from legislatio­ns aimed at protecting women and girls in the state, the Governor Godwin Obasekiled administra­tion has embarked on a series of programmes and reforms to empower the girl- child and ensure the rights of women are upheld. “In Edo State, there has been reduction in cases of rape and other cases of violence against women as we have been responsive, protecting the dignity and rights of Edo women.

“The government is working to end all forms of discrimina­tion against women in the state and country. We will continue to pay special attention to all forms of reforms and policies to encourage economic empowermen­t of women, education, inclusion, access to loan, security and political participat­ion.”

The first lady said Edo has launched the state’s Sex offenders’ Register and set up the Sexual Assault Referral Center ( SARC) in Benin City, to prosecute cases of Sexual and Gender- Based Violence ( SGBV) in the state.

“We will continue to set up more SARCS with two more in Edo Central and Edo North Senatorial Districts and replicate the same across the state so that we have at least one in each local government area,” she added.

On her part, Mrs. Bagudu noted that it was time for stakeholde­rs to move from talking to transforma­tion through actionable plans.

Okei- Odumakin noted, “Act, start a movement. Rather than watch abuse happen, stand up, speak up, intervene in potentiall­y harmful situations, or alert others for assistance.”

The 16 Days of Activism Against Gender- Based Violence is an internatio­nal campaign to challenge violence against women and girls. It takes place annually from November 25, the Internatio­nal Day for the Eliminatio­n of Violence against Women, to December 10, Human Rights Day.

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