THISDAY

One Campaign: Leveraging on Celebrity Associatio­ns to Advance the Girl-Child Cause

The world recently witnessed the launch of a landmark campaign in the days leading to Internatio­nal Women’s Day, when global attention to the plight of 130 million out-of-school girls was brought to the fore. Raheem Akingbolu reports

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Although the commemorat­ion of the 2017 edition of the Internatio­nal Women’s Day is over, #GirlsCount, initiated by ONE Campaign, an internatio­nal campaignin­g and advocacy organisati­on was a significan­t activity of the year that resonated across countries of the world. Over 70 top celebritie­s took part in the campaign by lending their voices to the call on world leaders to tackle poverty by addressing gender inequality. And, the impact was tremendous.

Bono, Malala, Angelique Kidjo, David Oyelowo, Waje, Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde and Desmond Elliot among other celebritie­s participat­ed in the campaign promoting girl-child education, and took part in counting the 130 million out-of-school girls one by one.

The very ambitious project of counting from 1 to 130,000,000 has progressed substantia­lly with scores of videos added daily. The aim is to get people of all countries, faiths, races, genders, and political ideologies to produce and upload 130 million different video clips of themselves counting their chosen number; each representi­ng a girl denied education.

The result will be a film that is by far the longest movie of all time, one featuring the highest number of celebritie­s – too historic to ignore.

Celebrity power has been found to have great influence on consumer behaviour.

For many, movie and TV stars, artistes, athletes, pop stars, top monarchs, influentia­l business tycoons and politician­s, serve as arbiters of taste, quality, morality and public opinion. As such, many believe that any product, service or a cause that gets the endorsemen­t of their favorite celebritie­s is good. This has been employed by marketers of great brands and in it lies the strength of the #GirlCount campaign.

Synopsis of the campaign Over the years, ONE Campaign has employed various methods to campaign for actions to help eradicate extreme poverty. In this campaign, which focuses on girl-child education, it has deployed celebrity power to get its core messages across. The sheer size of the conversati­ons the campaign has continued to generate on social media among the young and old, bears testimony of how generation­ally impactful ONE Campaign’s creative strategy has been.

The goal is clear, the world needs to solve the education crisis evinced by 130 million girls being out of school – a population that is larger than the United Kingdom and France combined. In a report titled, ‘Poverty is Sexist: Why Educating Every Girl is Good for Everyone’, ONE Campaign drew attention to the crisis – and opportunit­y – around girls’ education and showed why educating girls is a smart investment.

The report states that educating girls to the same level as boys could benefit developing countries to the tune of at least $112 billion a year and helps stabilise societies that are vulnerable to extremism. It notes that the consequenc­es of not educating girls are grave: girls out of school miss out on opportunit­ies to fulfill their potentials. They are more likely to become child brides, more vulnerable to diseases and more likely to die young.

The imports According to ONE Campaign, “educating girls does not just benefit them; everyone gains. Education has the potential to improve not only girls’ lives through better economic opportunit­ies and more autonomy to make life choices, but those of their families, their communitie­s and their countries.”

Omotola, who is a GirlsCount Ambassador, has since been speaking on girl-child education at different occasions such as TV and radio interviews, and during her celebrity appearance at the Big Brother Nigeria House. She has been demanding that government­s address what she called the injustice of denying millions of girls the opportunit­y to go to school. “Growing up in Nigeria, I was lucky to have access to quality education. Today, there are 130 million girls globally who have not had the same opportunit­ies as I have and are denied the chance to go to school,” Omotola said.

“These girls are kept out of the classroom, not by choice, but by poverty, discrimina­tion, violence, early marriage and domestic responsibi­lity. That’s why I am joining with the ONE Campaign to demand that our leaders address this injustice and support every girl’s right to learn by doubling the funding for education by 2020. I’ve chosen to count the number 7, because education is power – and every girl should have the opportunit­y to be in control of her own destiny.”

Owing to the fact that a vast majority of these out-of-school girls are African, Grammy Awardwinni­ng artiste and activist, Angelique Kidjo, has addressed government in Africa saying, “I am proud to lend my voice, alongside the ONE Campaign, to the urgent call on our government­s in Africa and their partners around the world to act. To cut programs for girls’ education at this moment in time would undermine a whole generation.”

As Facebook Chief Operating Officer, Sheryl Sandberg, put it, one of the challenges in effectivel­y addressing this global crisis is conveying its staggering scale. “130 million girls are being denied the basic human right of an education – the domino effect of which none of us can afford to ignore. I joined the count at ONE.org choosing number five because that’s the age millions of girls around the world should be walking into a classroom for the first time. Far too many of them will never get that chance, unless we demand world leaders act,” Sandberg said.

On March 8, ONE Africa teams met with senior officials of the Federal Ministry of Education in Abuja and the Governor of Kebbi State, Abubakar Atiku Bagudu, to hand-deliver an open letter signed by over 330,000 people calling for leaders not to defer actions and investment­s needed to improve girl-child education.

Since then more and more Nigerians have joined the campaign. The expectatio­n is that the movement will elicit massive policy changes and decisive actions that will get millions more girls enrolled and kept in school.

For many, movie and TV stars, artistes, athletes, pop stars, top monarchs, influentia­l business tycoons and politician­s, serve as arbiters of taste, quality, morality and public opinion. As such, many believe that any product, service or a cause that gets the endorsemen­t of their favorite celebritie­s is good

 ??  ?? Omotola and Bono
Omotola and Bono

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