THISDAY

CBN, Banks Harp on Gender Equality

- Nume Ekeghe

Citing the importance of creating an enabling work environmen­t for females, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and some commercial banks have stressed the need for greater inclusion of women in financial institutio­ns and other organisati­ons.

The Managing Director/ CEO Access Bank, Mr Herbert Wigwe, the Chairman Firstbank Nigeria Limited, Mrs. Ibukun Awosika, the Director Capacity Building, CBN, Mrs. Chizoba Mojekwu, among others made this call at the Nigerian Sustainabl­e Banking Principles (NSBP) workshop organised by Access Bank in Lagos yesterday.

In her Mojekwu said: “Organisati­ons are still largely patriarcha­l, and regulation­s do not work. That is what we know because if regulation­s were working, there is a regulation of a minimum of 30 per cent on a board. Why is it not happening in some organisati­ons?

“So, my view is that we are dealing with a major transforma­tional issue more than a technical challenge and that is an adaptive challenge.”

She also added: “We should also talk about hiring blind people and people with auditory and physically challenged, so it is important we drive conversati­ons that are holding women back in organisati­ons.”

On his part, Wigwe said the NSBP, “has come a long way from where we started from five years ago.”

“But there are still several institutio­ns that have not attained the level of compliance that we would expect particular­ly as it pertains to gender equality.

“When we talk about gender equality, my sense is not about having an equal number of men to women, but it is about giving women their rightful place.

“There are just as many great women and competent women to put in any position as men.

“However, we know that these disparitie­s occur across the entire world and some of us who have been great champions for gender equality for several years before the banking sustainabi­lity principle started.

“The fact that you have more and more of our colleagues join us we can place women where they truly should be for me is something that would extremely gladden me. “From a profession­al standpoint, for a gender that we know is as good as the other, we must accommodat­e them for several things which they do and which we don’t have. “So, the female profession­al who takes time off to have children why must they have a separate pay when they are responsibl­e for creating the next generation anyway so why can’t institutio­ns start to think of ways to support the female gender.” He further said: “Today’s deliberati­on is about strengthen­ing it as far as financial institutio­ns are concerned but I would urge us to take it to a different level. Let us get people in manufactur­ing and other fields to basically embrace what is good for the entire world which is about gender equality.

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