THISDAY

Nigerian Women Must Speak with One Voice to Make Desired Progress

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political party? We can do it. But it is because there is divide and rule and women allow it to happen. When you divide and rule us and put us in little boxes which we knowingly or unknowingl­y accept, then you have destroyed our power base.

So, in order to address the issue of extreme poverty and inequality among women, what type of programmes and policies would you recommend to the federal government?

The issue of poverty has become so endemic and has become generation­al. It is a national issue and not only an issue for women. It borders on our economy. Women are the poorest of the poor. If you say you are going to just give palliative­s, for how long will that last? How does that sustain a woman? We have to sit down as a country and design a Marshall Plan on poverty alleviatio­n, not only for women, but for the entire country. If you have someone like Akinwunmi Adesina, President of the African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB), if I am President Bola Tinubu, I would adopt him to see how we can benefit from his leadership at the AfDB. Look at the Grameen Bank, that was another thing that would have been used to break this cycle of poverty. I don’t know why everything that works in every other country, when it comes to Nigeria it finds a graveyard. In Bangladesh, the Grameen Bank was successful, it came here as People’s Bank, but where are we today? Poverty is still here. Akinwunmi Adesina talked about introducin­g a Youth Employment Developmen­t Bank, let us support him and ensure that the youths are fully involved and it should be a thing that everybody can contribute. So, we’ve got to do things systematic­ally with processes and plans stated out. We need to develop short-term, medium term and long-term plans for poverty alleviatio­n and follow it through. This fire brigade approach we have for every issue has not worked in the past, it is not working now and will not work in the future. If we want to really deliver our people from poverty, there is a process and plan that must be followed. We women are able to multi-task and run our families, even with low budget. Empower women and give them the technology they need to carry out their businesses, especially those in agricultur­e. They need the technology to be able to make the best garri. Now, I am seeing that garri is being imported from China, because it looks finer, whereas we should be exporting garri. We need farmers’ friendly technology that can allow women in the rural areas to see farming as a business that brings money to families, both in rural and urban areas. The moment farming becomes a money spinning venture and not for sustenance, then you know that there would be transforma­tion in the rural areas and communitie­s. With this we need to do a lot of education and advocacy in the communitie­s.

What are your plans for the Club and what should members expect from you?

Our Club is going to be 20 years next year. But from what I told you, it is as if we had been cocooned sort of. But the past presidents did a lot of things. If you remember, years ago before Akinwunmi Ambode became Governor of Lagos State, we had a conference in which we brought all the gubernator­ial candidates to a town hall meeting to come and tell us their plans for Lagos State, especially for women. We also have a scholarshi­p fund that we give to Pacelli School for the Blind and Children with disabiliti­es. We train children directly through Pacelli and one of them has gone to the university. We have about three of them we are training presently. Of course, we do a lot of advocacy. For me, in the next three years, which is stated in our constituti­on, except you have a second term, I have decided to have a broad theme. I decided to call it: “Validating Purpose, Upskilling, Upscaling and Advocacy for Human Developmen­t through Social Impact Projects.” This includes a lot. We are looking at a State where people are hungry. We want to do a food bank. We want to have a food bank that runs like anything you see abroad, if you can do it and then you get a lot of inventory. But with that kind of thing we would need a lot of support from the security agencies to do it successful­ly. Let’s say we decide to pick a community, because we cannot feed everybody in Lagos, develop a food bank and administer food to people in that area. We have something like that in England called The Passage, which the Catholic church does in Westminste­r. The poor goes there every week, they give them food and at Christmas, they give them a box of food. Also, in Cosmopolit­an Women’s Club, every sitting First Lady is an honorary member. For example, Mrs. Ibijoke Sanwo-Olu is an honorary member and having such a person as a member, you can imagine how successful we can be if we key into her own pet project. We have seen that her passion is on the fight against gender violence and children and it will be nice for us to work with her on that. We are also going to look at empowermen­t programmes for women entreprene­urs. For example, I will like to see that every year we support if not 100 women, at least 50 of them in either vocation training or in upscaling their businesses and ensuring that they are able to rise higher than what they have put together for themselves in terms of business. We have a member in our Club who is 90 years, Mrs. Shade Thomas-Fahm, who is one of our Trustees. This woman was the first to promote buy Nigeria and dress Nigeria with fabrics such as aso-oke, adire and whatever. She is trending in England for what she has done for the fashion industry and if only it was followed through, we wouldn’t be talking about what we are talking about now. So, I will like to see how we can partner her and sustain this dream. Now we see our adire all over the world and people are buying it for thousands of dollars. Where is the source? Nigeria, but they would never say it’s made in Ife in Nigeria. Does anybody know that the leather and whatever they use in making shoes come from Kano? No. They are all taken away in raw forms, processed and then we go out and buy. So, we want to work with people like Shade Thomas-Fahm, create awareness and get the younger people that are coming up now to key into this vision and see how we can upscale. You know some of these things you cannot do alone, you have to work with other associatio­ns and other people. Women capacity developmen­t is also very important. Women must be respected for who they are. If you do not have your values and dignity right, then people would take you for granted. Any woman leader, be it in business, politics or the corporate world and is not able to uplift other women has not done justice and pride to her womanhood. To be a woman in an empowered position, your legacy must be that you have empowered so many others behind you who would continue after you. Don’t be the lone star. Additional­ly, the Club has also decided that we would work closely with the Nigerian Conservati­on Foundation on the issue of environmen­t and in keeping Lagos clean. I have a passion for that as well because the Catholic Church has what is called Laudato Si, which is an encyclical by Pope Francis, that has become a working document in the United Nations on environmen­t issues. That document is so profound and has been well received. The Catholic Church in Nigeria is seriously working on that. We have desk on environmen­t. Before Lagos State banned styrofoam (a type of plastic widely used as food containers), we (Catholic Church in Lagos), had already talked about it. So, in the Archdioces­e of Lagos State, we had already banned the use of such plastics and if you use plastics, we always advised that you reduce, re-use and recycle. Actually, every September, the church comes up with a project on the environmen­t. Pope Francis says we must not turn the world into a pile of filths by dumping. We dump so much and it is becoming a problem. So, he says we have to listen to the two cries: the cry of the earth and the cry of the poor. The cry of the poor is so much that it is affecting everybody. The cry of the earth is such that we are depleting and polluting the earth. The pollution is too much and we have plastics everywhere. He has also proposed that when we use plastics, we make it such that those that collect the plastics can sell them and make money. So, when you collect the plastics, you take it to a plastic bank and you are paid for it. In northern Nigeria, I hear that those who collect the plastics are given rice, beans, grains for the amount of plastics that they bring. So, some of our schools and churches have where you can dump your plastics. The church has also said to its priests that when they build, they should build with the environmen­t in mind and use environmen­t-friendly bulbs. Also, concretisi­ng your whole area is not allowed. You must leave some areas green in your building for people to be able to see nature. Pollution on every sort impacts on health and living standards. So, we are trying tell our women to change their lifestyles. If you used to go to the market with a plastic and you tell people to give you 10 plastic bags for 10 things that you buy, dedicate one shopping bag to go to the market and reject plastics. Also, cook only that which your family can eat and do not waste. Wildlife is the work of God and must be respected. So, you cannot just say you want to kill all of them; you want to destroy the forest and eat all of them. Those things are sacred and must be preserved. We must love ourselves, love God and love nature.

 ?? ?? Fatayi-Williams
Fatayi-Williams

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