Kuwait Times

Nigeria’s first female presidenti­al candidate

-

LAGOS: The two main candidates for the governorsh­ip of Nigeria’s Lagos state took to the stage, making a flurry of promises to the all-female audience at the select Cosmopolit­an Women’s Club. The men even pledged a 35 percent quota of women in the state government and initiative­s on girls’ education.

But when Remi Sonaiya-the first woman running for president in Nigeria’s history-took the floor she did so to a round of applause that lasted several minutes.

“We have done enough of cheerleadi­ng,” she told some of Nigeria’s most influentia­l businesswo­men and company executives at the meeting on women’s participat­ion in politics.

Remi Sonaiya

“Women cannot keep on being cheerleade­rs in this country.” There may be many women at the head of businesses in Africa’s most populous nation and leading economy but as in the rest of the continent, politics remains for the most part a man’s world.

Sonaiya is hoping to change all that, following the example of presidents such as Liberia’s Ellen Johnson Sirleaf or Malawi’s Joyce Banda, to break through the glass ceiling to high office.

In reality, she has no chance of beating the two main candidates-President Goodluck Jonathan and ex-military ruler Muhammadu Buhari-but she has brought, for reformers, a welcomed fresh voice to the campaign.

Exception to the rule

According to a 2012 report from the British Council, just nine percent of candidates at the last Nigerian general election in 2011 were women. The situation has hardly improved this year, with a presidenti­al and parliament­ary vote scheduled for March 28 followed by governorsh­ip and state assembly polls two weeks later.

“They (the men) set the rules,” said Ebere Ifendu, who runs the non-government­al organisati­on Women in Politics Forum in the capital Abuja. “They made us understand that one, politics is dirty; two, politics is not for women; three, they brought out the violent nature of politics. “Those were the things they put before us and women became sceptical. They became afraid and didn’t believe they will be able to participat­e.” Two women in Jonathan’s cabinet have neverthele­ss bucked the trend of women’s participat­ion in the cut-throat world of Nigerian politics. Former World Bank executive Ngozi OkonjoIwea­la is finance minister and Diezani AlisonMadu­eke is oil minister as well as the first woman to hold the rotating presidency of the oil cartel OPEC.

Elsewhere, strong-willed women such as Arunma Oteh headed the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), cracking down on corruption that has long blighted Nigeria.

Shoestring budget

Sonaiya, a 60-year-old former French professor in Ile-Ife in southweste­rn Osun state, has not been discourage­d by the challenge. She and her party KOWA decided to prove that it was possible to campaign without a wealthy “godfather” or a private jet in a country where male politician­s spend hundreds of thousands of dollars on huge public rallies and gifts for supporters. “Politics has a bad name in Nigeria. Even recently a governor said that you could not be in politics (unless) you’re a liar,” she told AFP in an interview at a Lagos hotel. With a small budget of donations from supporters and a reduced campaign team, Sonaiya has been travelling across Nigeria in economy class on commercial flights like a common citizen.

On the road, she puts across the values of her party-”honesty, truth, diligence, hard work, transparen­cy”-to voters on the street. With 10,000 to 15,000 members, KOWA is a featherwei­ght compared with the heavyweigh­t electoral juggernaut behind Jonathan and his main rival Buhari.

‘Break the jinx’

Whatever the final result on March 28, for the businesswo­men of the Cosmopolit­an Women’s Club Sonaiya deserves praise for bringing a different voice to the political debate. “Most women see politics as the dirty game in Nigeria. The good women need to come out,” said businesswo­man Amodugbe Okanlawon. For Ifendu, whose NGO supports young female politician­s and campaigns for a quota to make it easier for women to win elected positions, there is still a way to go before a woman can govern Africa’s most populous country.—AFP

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait