THISDAY

Tinubu: We're Poised To Empowering Girls, Women, Young People

Stresses no woman must die in childbirth UNFPA highlights inequaliti­es in sexual, reproducti­ve health

- Deji Elumoye

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has expressed the commitment of his government to the welfare and empowermen­t of girls, women, and young people in the country.

Unveiling the United Nations Fund for Population Activities' (UNFPA) State of the World Population 2024 Report at the State House, Abuja on Wednesday, the President stressed the need to address the challenges facing the vulnerable people in the society.

The UNFPA's flagship State of the World Population Report, which was themed “Interwoven Lives, Threads of Hope: Ending inequaliti­es in sexual and reproducti­ve health and rights”, followed the global launch, which held in Geneva on April 17, 2024.

Represente­d by the Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Prof Ali Pate, President Tinubu highlighte­d the importance of ensuring that girls stay in school and avoid early motherhood, providing access to quality healthcare and services, and implementi­ng laws to end genderbase­d violence and harmful practices such as early/forced marriages and female genital mutilation.

He expressed his administra­tion's commitment towards keeping hope alive for girls, women, and young people by fulfilling its promises to accelerate actions in Nigeria, adding that his government will ensure that no woman dies during child birth while every girl will have access to quality education and healthcare.

The President explained that with a focus on strengthen­ing the four D Principles - Developmen­t, Democracy, Demography, and Diaspora - the government aims to integrate modern solutions into policies and programs that benefit this demographi­c.

He stated that the Nigeria Health Sector Renewal Investment Initiative, launched in December 2023, is a testament to the administra­tion's commitment to the health and well-being of girls, women, and young people.

His words: "This initiative aims to improve access to quality healthcare services, including reproducti­ve health and family planning, and address the unique challenges facing this demographi­c.

“Meeting the aspiration­s of the population affected by these interwoven threads, who are mostly women, girls and young people, places a great demand and a sense of duty on us all to keep that hope alive. We must fulfil the promises to accelerate actions in Nigeria and ensure no woman dies giving birth.

“We must ensure that girls stay in school instead of becoming mothers at tender ages, provide access to quality health care and services everywhere, including accelerate­d access to family planning as fundamenta­l for managing our population.

“Also, we must ensure the implementa­tion of laws to end gender-based violence and harmful practices like early/forced marriages, female genital mutilation, that are against women and girls and indirectly against true and enduring developmen­t of our nation and people.

“The narrative in the paragraph that was just quoted above, are part of the concerns that formed the Renewed Hope Agenda, particular­ly anchored on strengthen­ing the four D Principles: Developmen­t, Democracy, Demography and Diaspora, aimed at integratin­g modern solutions into our policies.

“With a dynamic population of 220 million that is youthful, growing fast and projected to 450 million by 2050, making us among the fourth or fifth largest, most populous countries in the world by then, and with our rich cultural diversity, we are poised to harness our demographi­c potential for developmen­t of our country.

“I want to assure you, that we are taking bold steps and committed to addressing issues that affect our youth reproducti­ve health, and in December 2023 I launched the Nigeria Health Sector Renewal Investment Initiative, through the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, which is anchored in a sector-wide approach and the Basic Healthcare Provision Pact”.

Earlier in his speech, Governor Abdullahi Sule of Nasarawa State expressed outrage over the continued high rate of maternal mortality in Nigeria, calling it "unacceptab­le" and "a shame" that women still die in childbirth in 2024.

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