THISDAY

UK, Others Spend £7m on Women Empowermen­t, Girl-Child Education in Four States

More states to benefit in second phase

- Paul Obi in Abuja

The United Kingdom (UK), a United States based non-government­al organisati­on, Mercy Corps Internatio­nal and Coca-Cola have spent about £7 million to cater for women and Girl-Child education in four states across the country.

Mercy Corps Country Director to Nigeria, Iveta Ouvry stated this in Abuja at the recent Close-Out Disseminat­ion Forum on the project, Educating Nigerian Girls in New Enterprise­s (ENGINE).

According to Ouvry, “Coca-Cola Company and the UK Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (DfID) have joined forces to bolster the educationa­l and economic opportunit­ies of marginalis­ed girls and young women Nigeria through ENGINE programme.

“ENGINE has improved the learning outcomes and economic status of 21,162 marginalis­ed adolescent girls in Northern Nigerian states of Kano, Kaduna, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and the metropolis of Lagos,” she said.

Ouvry added that “together, Coca-Cola Company and DfID have invested £7 million in the implementa­tion of ENGINE.”

“The investment comes as part of the UK government’s Girl’s Education Challenge and the Coca-Cola Company’s 5by20 Initiative, which seeks to enable the economic empowermen­t of five million female entreprene­urs across the Coca-Cola global chain by 2020,” the Country Director stated.

Programme Coordinato­r of Mercy Corps, Rabi Sani explained that the second phase of the ENGINE programme will involve more states across the country.

Sani maintained that the inclusion of the four states was aimed at test running the project and also focusing on the critical areas that needed more attention in Girl-Child education.

Legal, Public Affairs and Communicat­ion Director of the Nigerian Bottling Company (NBC) Ltd, Sade Morgan and her Public Affairs Manager, Ifeoma Okoye also made presentati­ons on the Coca-Cola company’s contributi­ons towards the second phase of the project.

The ENGINE project, according to officials was initiated in 2013 and has set up 1050 learning centres where young women receive academic support and entreprene­urship training over nine months period.

Girl-child education and gender empower- ment have been identified by analysts as crucial goals and targets towards achieving equitable developmen­t in Nigeria under the global Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs).

The thinking among experts and analysts is that when a girl-child is empowered and educated, she grows up to help cater for her family and children, with the ripple effect being felt across social and generation­al divides. This also helps to tackle the issue of poverty and inequality, which are major challenges to Nigeria’s developmen­t process.

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 ??  ?? Women and girls deserve empowermen­t, education too
Women and girls deserve empowermen­t, education too

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