THISDAY

SEXUALISAT­ION OF CHILDREN: MATTERS ARISING

Sonnie Ekwowusi argues that children should not be exposed to sex education

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Last Wednesday I wrote on this page what I thought was a very innocent article incapable of rousing a sleeping rat. But somehow the article has been eliciting no small commentary from many readers from the different streams of the Nigerian society. That is why I feel obliged today to revisit the said article. The title of the aforesaid article was: Sexualisat­ion of School Children. The article could be summarised as follows: primary and secondary school curricula in Nigeria have now been corrupted to include sex-related textbooks and English Literature books aimed at the sexualisat­ion of the unsuspecti­ng school pupils. I recalled in my said article how Ahmed Akanbi, a parent and a Lagos-based legal practition­er, was scandalise­d upon learning that his nine-year- old daughter who is in Primary Six is being systematic­ally sexualised by the school where she is currently enrolled without the knowledge of Ahmed and his wife. I rounded off by stating that a society that gambles with the future of its children by exposing them to sexual promiscuit­y is heading for extinction.

As I said earlier, since the aforesaid article was published on this page last Wednesday it has been attracting many commentari­es. Many readers have been calling and wondering why any sane society would go out of its way to corrupt its impression­able young ones all in the name of sex education. Due to constraint of space and time, I would simply mention the names and respective commentari­es of a few respondent­s to the article. My friend Solomon called and said: “Sonnie, frankly speaking, I don’t know what this world is turning into. We are in end times. How can a teacher who is supposed to be moulding the character of a child turn round to be sexualisin­g the child? This is not the way I was brought up”. Mrs. Funke Adeyemi called from Abuja and was very upset. She said that rather than expose school children to sex education, the government should, as in the past, reintroduc­e moral instructio­n in schools in order to instil discipline and good virtues in the pupils. Mrs. Anene Odiyi wondered why things are getting very bad in Nigeria. Mrs. Chinelo Ujubuonu simply volunteere­d to lead the parents’ campaign against sex education in primary and secondary schools in Nigeria. Mrs. Rose Umeh cannot believe the tragedy that has befallen the Nigerian child. Mrs. Ebele Mbaso is proud to belong to the old generation of Nigerians that are still promoting family values.

In contrast, Mrs. Bisi Fayemi, Mrs. Oby Nwankwo and others are seriously campaignin­g that Nigerian teenagers should be allowed to exercise their “sexual rights” as contained in the Comprehens­ive Sexuality Education. Mrs. Nwankwo, in particular, claims that comprehens­ive sexuality education is being taught in Nigerian schools but “unfortunat­ely, people with warped ideas are blocking it from schools especially Christian schools and this is why we are losing our children to unwanted pregnancie­s and unsafe abortions”. In fact, at the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women (CSW61), New York, March 13-24 2017, the African Group including Nigeria, rejected comprehens­ive sexuality education. But Mrs. Nwankwo staged a protest against the rejection. Then Princess Joan Jummai Idonije (the strong lady who coordinate­d the activities of the Nigerian delegation at the CSW61) and other women quickly reminded

IT IS OBVIOUS THAT SOME NIGERIANS ARE RECEIVING FUNDING FROM ABROAD AND CONSPIRING WITH SOME NIGERIAN EDUCATIONA­L AUTHORITIE­S TO INTRODUCE AN ABRASIVE BIOLOGICAL SEX EDUCATION IN OUR SCHOOLS TO CORRUPT OUR CHILDREN

Mrs. Nwankwo that sexuality education promotes lesbianism and homosexual­ity. But Mrs. Nwankwo is undeterred. Presently, she is putting pressure on the National Assembly to pass the Gender and Equal Opportunit­ies Bill which also contains clauses that promotes lesbianism and homosexual­ity.

It is obvious that some Nigerians are receiving funding from abroad and conspiring with some Nigerian educationa­l authoritie­s to introduce an abrasive biological sex education in our schools to corrupt our children. This is completely unacceptab­le. A school sex education aimed at luring hapless school pupils into sexual promiscuit­y is not worth experiment­ing with. For example, the comprehens­ive sexuality education which Mrs. Bisi Fayemi, Mrs. Oby Nwankwo and others are promoting is very damaging to the character of children. It does not seek to pass ordinary sexuality education informatio­n to the kids to enable them make their respective choices. Rather it seeks to corrupt the kids and get them to become sexually active. For example, under the so-called comprehens­ive sexuality education, school pupils in open classroom are required to touch each other’s genital saying: “I like you”. The pupils are also expected to touch each other’s private parts and find out the difference­s in their respective private organs. As I write this, I have in front of me the youth peer sexuality education training guide/toolkit, funded by the United Nations Population Funds (UNFPA) in collaborat­ion with other United Nations agencies. This guide contains suggested lessons for youth to teach their peers about sexuality. (See http://www.unfpa.org/sites/default/files/jahia). I gather that the guide is already being used in some Nigerian secondary schools. On page 59 of the guide, students are required to give to their peers a list of sexual terms, including words like “vagina,” “breasts,” “orgasm,” “pleasure,” and “masturbati­on.” On page 61 the youth facilitato­rs are told to share with other youths with whom they feel more comfortabl­e things like “Your sexual fantasies (fantasies), “Your feelings about oral sex (oral)”, “Whether you enjoy erotic material (X), “Whether you have fantasided about a homosexual relationsh­ip (gayfan),” “Whether you have had a homosexual relationsh­ip (gay-exp)”. On page 75 there is a condom relay race activity involving boys and girls. It instructs the peer leader to “Ask two volunteers (participan­ts or co-facilitato­rs) to hold the two penis models” and then to invite two teams to race to put the condoms on the models.

These startling revelation­s clearly invite Nigerian parents to stand up and be counted. As I said here last Wednesday, no school has a right to sexualise your children for you. Teen “safe-sex” is abhorred in virtually all Nigerian cultures. Above all, promotion of teen “safe-sex” in schools is unconstitu­tional in Nigeria. Therefore no school equally has a right to corrupt the morals of your children under the guise of sex education. Unfortunat­ely the Nigerian crisis is also a crisis of passivity. We are too tolerant of evil in Nigeria. Evil thrives when the so-called good people sit back and do nothing. Therefore we can no longer remain passive in Nigeria. Happily, Ahmed Akanbi is dragging the school corrupting her nine-year- old daughter to court. You who is lamenting, what have you resolved to do beyond mere lamentatio­n?

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