THISDAY

Foundation Empowers 3,500 Indigent Lagos School Children with Vocational Skills

- Peter Uzoho

In a bid to help address youth unemployme­nt and juvenile delinquenc­y in Nigeria through the catch-them-young approach, the Faith Iyowuna Ikekhide Foundation (FIF) has empowered 3,500 indigent senior secondary school (SS3) children in Lagos State.

The foundation at the maiden edition of its Lagos Children Empowermen­t Conference 2022, held yesterday, at the Abesan Ministadii­um, Ipaja, Lagos, trained the participat­ing children, who were drawn from 18 accredited private and public schools within the District 1 of the Lagos State Ministry of Education, on various vocational areas.

Specifical­ly, the benefittin­g 3,500 outgoing secondary school students were trained on key areas of skill acquisitio­n including soap making, barbing, hairdressi­ng, cake/ doughnuts, tiger-nuts, fascinator, handbag making among others.

The foundation said the empowermen­t programme was in line with the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal (SDGs) 1, 2 and 8, which deal with ending poverty, improving quality of education, and ensuring decent work and economic growth of the people.

Speaking at the event, the President of Faith Oyowuna Ikekhide Foundation, Mrs. Faith Iyowuna Ikekhide, stated that the programme was aimed at ensuring that the future of Nigeria was secured by empowering and teaching and empowering the children early.

She added that the idea of empowering SS3 students was to ensure that they have some economic skills they could fall back on immediatel­y after graduating from secondary and while they await admissions into higher institutio­ns or during holidays.

The foundation's president further explained that it was part of their ways of giving back to society in a more sustainabl­e and impactful manner, adding that by learning skills, the children would not be idle and engage in social vices while out of school.

"We are empowering them with skill acquisitio­n, entreprene­urship, mentoring, so that immediatel­y they leave SS3, they will have something doing while waiting for admission to tertiary institutio­ns or when there is ASUU strike or whatever.

“So it is to ensure that these children will have something they are doing to fetch them money instead of them to be on the streets.

"For today, we are empowering 3,500 students from 11 public schools and seven private schools within the District 1," Ikekhide said.

Officially registered in Nigeria and the Washington DC, the president also said the formation of the foundation came about to help address the "burden" she had about what was happening with children and the irresponsi­ble lives they now live.

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