Daily Trust

Despite making up 49.4 per cent of the total population, women have always been marginalis­ed in Nigeria’s political space. According to data from the Centre for Democracy and Developmen­t, women formed 4.17 per cent of elected office holders in the 2019 el

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lot of women should be domiciled.

According to a published report by the John Hopkins School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies African Programme, titled ‘Gendered Contests; Women in Competitiv­e Elections’ on how women fared in the 2019 elections, women won only five per cent of all contested seats.

The breakdown revealed that for the presidenti­al election (the total position was one) total number of candidates 73, number of women candidates six, number of women elected, zero. For the National Assembly (Senate), number of positions 109, number of candidates 1,904, number of women candidates 253, number of women elected, seven. For the National Assembly (House), total positions 360, number of candidates, 468, number of women, 533, number of women elected, 12. For the gubernator­ial (total number of positions 26) number of candidates, 2412, number of women, 74, number of women elected, zero. For state Houses of Assembly (total position 990) total number of candidates, 14,583, number of women candidates, 1,825, number of women elected, 37.

Damilola Agbalajobi of the Department of Political Science, College of Management Sciences, Redeemer’s University, Nigeria (RUN) in one of her reviewed paper, ‘Women’s participat­ion and the political process in Nigeria: Problems and Prospects’ said, Nigerian women constitute about half of the population of the country and are known to play vital roles as mother, producer, time manager, community organiser and social and political activist.

Despite the major roles women play and their population, the society has not given recognitio­n to them and to the fact that they are discrimina­ted against. This is due to some cultural stereotype­s, abuse of religion, traditiona­l practices and patriarcha­l societal structures.

No wonder the crave for the 35 per cent affirmativ­e agenda was loud during President Goodluck Jonathan’s administra­tion as it was driven by the First Lady, Dame Patience Jonathan, for women to have quality representa­tion at both the upper and lower houses.

In his address to the nation on January 1, 2020, President Muhammadu Buhari echoed a keenness for a new change of order. Declaring 2020 as the beginning of a new decade of prosperity and promise, the president left no one in doubt of the enthusiasm in charting a better course of greatness for the country in the new decade.

However, it’s left to be seen if the promise of prosperity will translate to better opportunit­ies for women in one of the world’s largest democracie­s ranked by the UN as one of the worst for female representa­tion in parliament.

Despite making up 49.4 per cent of the total population, women have always been marginalis­ed in Nigeria’s political space. According to data from the Centre for Democracy and Developmen­t, women formed 4.17 per cent of elected office holders in the 2019 elections, a decline from the 2015-19 period where women formed 5.65 per cent of elected office holders.

Statistics also reveal that out of the 109 senators in the National Assembly, only nine are women, while only 27 out of the 360 members of the House of Representa­tives are women. The picture clearly depicts a lopsided membership of the House in favour of the men. Women are still underrepre­sented and obviously marginalis­ed in democratis­ation in the legislativ­e and executive arms of government. This trend flows from the national level, to state down to local levels where few women take the lead in local government as chairmen and councillor­s.

Record has it that no woman has ever been president or vice president in Nigeria. Women hold just 7 per cent of elected positions, even though they make up nearly 50 per cent of the electorate. The 7 per cent figure is one of the lowest in the world.

The National Gender Policy (NGP) formulated a 35% Affirmativ­e Action (AA) in Nigeria since 2006. The NGP is recognised but is not practised as the structures and processes needed are not in place, unlike in Rwanda, where in 2003 the government approved a new constituti­on that included a quota system for women at all levels of government. The legislatio­n mandated that 30 per cent of all representa­tives, including those in parliament, be women. Rwanda’s quota is different from many other systems in that it’s not a quota solely on candidates, but rather reserves a minimum number of seats for women (often known as Equality of Result quotas).

Speaking during the 2020 Internatio­nal Women’s Day, the chairperso­n of Lagos chapter of the Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA), Mrs Philomena Nneji, said they were postulatin­g the way to close the gender disparity in the country.

She noted that despite the Beijing Declaratio­n, there was still a lot of disparity in the opportunit­ies availed to women in various areas such as education, health and security and as a result, no country has been able to achieve gender equality.

In the health sector, informatio­n from the United Nation’s website also revealed that Nigeria’s 40 million women of childbeari­ng age (between 15 and 49 years of age) suffer a disproport­ionately high level of health issues surroundin­g birth. While the country represents 2.4 per cent of the world’s population, it currently contribute­s 10 per cent of global deaths for pregnant mothers.

Latest figures show a maternal mortality rate of 576 per 100,000 live births, the fourth-highest globally. Each year, approximat­ely 262,000 babies die at birth, the world’s second-highest national total. Infant mortality currently stands at 69 per 1,000 live births while for under-fives it has risen to 128 per 1,000 live births. More than half of the under-five deaths – 64 per cent – result from malaria, pneumonia or diarrhoea.

At 27 per cent, the prevalence of female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) among girls and women aged 15-49 years is lower than in many countries where the practice is carried out, but Nigeria still has the third-highest absolute number of women and girls (19.9 million) who have undergone FGM/C worldwide. It is more commonly practised in the south, driven by grandmothe­rs and mothersin-law aiming to ‘‘curb promiscuit­y’’, or prepare girls for marriage and conform to tradition.

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