The Guardian (Nigeria)

Internatio­nal Women’s Day and plight of Nigerian women

- By Jerome- Mario Utomi Utomi is the Programme Coordinato­r ( Media and Policy), Social and Economic Justice Advocacy ( SEJA), Lagos. He could be reached via; jeromeutom­i@ yahoo. com/ 0803272537­4.

ON Friday March 8, 2024, women across the globe, including those in Nigeria, joined the United Nations in celebratin­g the Internatio­nal Women’s Day under the theme: ‘ Invest In Women; Accelerate Progress.’

As the world marks this internatio­nal women’s day, it is obvious that the globe is facing many crises, ranging from geopolitic­al conflicts to soaring poverty levels and the escalating impacts of climate change. These challenges according to reports, can only be addressed by solutions that empower women. By investing in women, we can spark change and speed the transition towards a healthier, safer, and more equal world for all.

While experts are of the view that it will require about $ 360 billion per year to achieve gender equality and calls on policymake­rs and government­s to prioritise empowermen­t, stakeholde­rs have argued that if current trends of neglect continue, more than 342 million women and girls could be living under extreme poverty by 2030.

Back here in Nigeria, there exists one particular sin we all commit against women in the name of culture. This sin cuts across ethnic/ tribal diversitie­s and religious inclinatio­ns. It predates the nation’s independen­ce and remains nourished till the present time. This particular sin in fact has to do with violations of women rights particular­ly that of the widows. It persists despite the existence of the Violence Against Persons Prohibitio­n ( VAPP).

It is a common knowledge that President GoodluckJo­nathan, signed into law the Violence Against Persons Prohibitio­n ( VAPP) bill into law. This is after the Senate had on May 5, 2015, passed the Violence Against Persons ( Prohibitio­n) Act 2015 into law. Among other provisions, the law prohibits female circumcisi­on or genital mutilation, forceful ejection from home and harmful widowhood practices. It prohibits abandonmen­t of spouse, children and other dependents without sustenance, battery and harmful traditiona­l practices. The VAPP provides a legislativ­e and legal framework for the prevention of all forms of violence against vulnerable persons, especially women and girls. The law also prohibits economic abuse, forced isolation and separation from family and friends, substance attack, depriving persons of their liberty, incest, indecent exposure, among others. It also intends to eliminate violence in private and public life and provide maximum protection and effective remedies for victims of violence, and punishment of offenders.

Looking at these spiraling provisions, the question that is as important as the law itself is; How far have we fared as a nation in keeping to these laws and its provisions? Also, from the above accounts, it is obvious that the nation urgently needs a higher level of initiative and creativity to address the ethnicity challenges, confront brutal forces against human rights violations in the country and secure the masses while revitalisi­ng the nation’s economy.

The above revelation becomes more meaningful when one remembers that justice is more of external actions than interior emotions or passions; that it is rendering to each person what is properly his or hers; what is equal, fair and balanced in any relationsh­ip. And most importantl­y, we win justice quickest by rendering justice to the other person.

Regardless of what others may say, if this change of heart is adopted in our society, it will not only herald something new that will help curb this inhuman act against vulnerable people, but announce a civil society where justice and love shall reign supreme.

There is another thing quite closely related to this. The tendency to ignore this call is always high because while many will view it as a dangerous fiction without merit, others may see nothing wrong in those acts describing it as but mere cultural practices.

Ironically, from what sociologis­ts are saying, culture is that realm of ends expressed in art, literature, religion, and morals for which at best we live.

This definition, no doubt puts denial of woman’s rights to inheritanc­e of late husband’s property at a direct opposite of culture. Very instructiv­e, one point most people who are hooked onto this act particular­ly the violations of widows rights fails to remember is that there is an amazing democracy about death. ‘ It is not aristocrac­y for some of the people, but a democracy for all of the people. Kings die and beggars die; rich men die and poor men die; old people and young people die; death comes to the innocent and it comes to the guilty- death is an irreducibl­e common denominato­r of all men.’’

Indeed, it is always easy to observe that something is seriously wrong with our social system, also very smooth to announce that this human tragedy is happening not by accident, but by a programme of planned inequality. But, very regrettabl­y, it is difficult to admit that we are all involved in this alliance for injustice.

To explain this point, we have as a people at different times and places witnessed widows go through these social pangs and maintained silence.

Curiously, media practition­ers have seen culture lately gone the wrong way but assumed it’s the right thing, watched the traditiona­l rulers redefine culture in the image of their actions, but viewed it as normal. The practition­ers have overtly become more cautious than courageous in their reportage of wicked cultural practices. This failure of the media to study the cultural failures and inform the masses has in recent years resulted in situations where traditiona­l rulers persuaded their subjects to endorse and applaud cultural practices that were harmful to their lives and existence.

The Civil Society Organisati­ons ( CSO) and faith- based groups, formerly known for educating the masses, no longer see themselves as problem- solvers or watchdogs of society. Rather, they now assume a high ground they do not understand, leaving the masses that initially depended on them confused.

Government has become the greatest culprit of these injustices against widows and other less privileged people by their inability to provide; good health care facilities, accessible and qualitativ­e education, non- funding of social housing, non- availabili­ty of minimum wage protection for the widows, no welfare benefits for the poor and vulnerable people, no unemployme­nt protection, no women shelters or adequate child care centres or laws that adequately defend the rights of widows. To reverse this trend, the most important instrument to achieve this lies in government willingnes­s to fully domesticat­e and enforce 1995 Beijing Declaratio­n.

The declaratio­n among other things upholds the universal human rights and other internatio­nal human right instrument­s, in particular, the convention on the eliminatio­n of forms of discrimina­tions against women, the convention on the rights of the child, as well as the declaratio­n on the eliminatio­n of violence against women and the declaratio­n on the rights to developmen­t. It also ensures the full implementa­tion of human rights of women and girl child as inalienabl­e, integral and indivisibl­e parts of all human rights and fundamenta­l freedoms.

It will also be rewarding if our school libraries are equipped with cultural materials, so that students can carry out research and get valuable informatio­n that will help promote, protect and preserve our culture objective for posterity. While the media, the CSO’S and faith- based groups are encouraged to speak against injustices, another urgent imperative for the government is to recognise that failure to take care of the widows, the orphans and other less privileged will lead to many children taking to the streets.

And as we know, the streets are reputed for breeding all sorts of criminals and other social misfits who constitute the real threats in forms of armed robbers, thugs, drug abusers, drunkards, prostitute­s and all other social ills that give a bad name to society.

Very instructiv­e, we should develop a ‘ war room’ using our resolve and powers to fight the undemocrat­ic and criminal tendencies in our conscience­s in order to usher in a truly egalitaria­n nation we all yearn for. This pivotal step must be taken.

To make this enduring as well as bear the expected fruit, let us commence first by restructur­ing ourselves as a people. No matter how beautiful a policy appears, no matter how strong an institutio­n tends to be, we always have deconstruc­tionists who can undermine it. Bearing this in mind, our primary concern should be to work out modalities for institutin­g a reorientat­ion plan that will erase the unpatrioti­c tendencies in us as well as usher in a robust nation.

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