THISDAY

AIICO Partners ActionAID, Donates N4.5m

- Ebere Nwoji

AIICO Insurance Plc is partnering ActionAid Nigeria in its ongoing fight against

Infanticid­e in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

Infanticid­e, is the crime of a mother killing her child for reasons ranging from multiple births in form of twins or triplets, growing upper teeth first, among others, in line with the culture of some communitie­s.

In support of the fight, AIICO Insurance had donated N3.1 million to the organisati­on and has gone further to dedicate N100 out of every auto and travelers insurance policy it sold for the course. AIICO, at a press briefing in Lagos to announce its partnershi­p with the organisati­on, presented a cheque of N1, 474,800 which accrued from all the policies on auto and travelers insurance it sold in the first half of this year to the company.

ActionAid Nigeria, which is a local chapter of the global ActionAid federation, and stands for promoting human rights and eradicatin­g poverty, said in 2018, it discovered through investigat­ions that children of multiple births (twins, triplets) were considered taboos and killed in some communitie­s in the nation’s capital.

The Country Director of ActionAid in Nigeria Ene Obi, while narrating to the media how her organisati­on got into infanticid­e project said it discovered that natives of Bassa-komo, Gbariyamma and Ganagana tribes in Abuja, still believed that if a mother dies from childbirth or while nursing a baby, the baby is evil and must be buried (alive) with the deceased mother.

She also said through investigat­ions, she discovered that in some other communitie­s, children with albinism, born with down syndrome, birth defects and even those who grow their upper teeth first are victims of these barbaric practice.

“Infanticid­e in the FCT remains a practice shrouded in secrecy with very few people speaking openly. The process of killing these babies involves different methods such as poisoning (with a mixture of deadly plants and herbs), starvation and suffocatio­n,” she added.

“The support provided by ActionAid Nigeria with funding support from the European Union includes: constructi­on of a new dormitory for the 168 children and their carers; constructi­on of a block of three classrooms for children below five years; setting up of vegetable garden, poultry and fishery for nutritiona­l support and provision of dairies for infants and life skills and skills acquisitio­ns training for older children,” she explained.

According to her, ActionAid Nigeria, is also working with the communitie­s, the National Human Rights Commission, local government areas and relevant government agencies to end this barbaric practice.

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