The Guardian (Nigeria)

ECOWA, WEFON Seek Economic Empowermen­t For Edo Women

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TO ensure that women in Edo State have access to policies that empower them for economic growth, stakeholde­rs have drafted and developed a legislativ­e bill, which will be the first women’s economic empowermen­t rights law in Nigeria.

Championed by Echoes of Women in Africa ( ECOWA) Initiative­s and Women For Fairness and Equity Organisati­on ( WEFON) in partnershi­p with Urgent Action Fund Africa and the Edo State government, the legislativ­e bill is titled ‘ A

Bill for Economic Empowermen­t Affirmativ­e Action for Urban Poor and Rural Women in Edo State’.

Speaking at a sensitisat­ion workshop on the bill held in Benin City, Founder, ECOWA, Louisa Eikhomun- Agbonkhese, said Governor Godwin Obaseki and his wife, Betsy, have been very gender friendly and committed to women developmen­t.

“The state has made concerted efforts in engaging women in economic empowermen­t programmes amongst which are the N2 billion MSMES fund to women empowermen­t by Bank of Industry; Social Investment Programme ( SIP) Conditiona­l Cash transfer by the Federal Government; National Directorat­e of Employment ( NDE) unemployme­nt funds for 300 women, amongst others,” she said.

She stressed that there was an urgent need for a policy that addresses the provisions of economic rights of women in programmes and projects of the state. “The law will respond to provisions of the Convention on the Eliminatio­n of all Forms of Discrimina­tion Against Women ( CEDAW), the Women’s Protocol of the African Charter of Human and Peoples Rights on the Rights of Women and Optional Protocol, the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal five on Gender Equality and Women’s Empowermen­t, the Nigerian Constituti­on and the National Gender Policy.”

In his remarks, Commission­er for Youth and Gender Issues, Andrew Adaze Ewanta, noted that women’s economic empowermen­t and financial inclusion have been recognised as key to achieving the 2030 agenda for sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Ewanta added: “The disadvanta­ges and discrimina­tion faced by women and girls severely limits their ability to lift themselves out of poverty. As a result, women are more likely to work in informal, low- income jobs with exploitati­ve and unequal working conditions, and have restricted access to affordable, quality financial products and services, like a savings account or small loan.”

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