Women Empowerment: The Ganduje Intervention
Since the post Beijing era whereby the issues around the imperative of granting equality of opportunities to all members of mankind irrespective of gender, conversations around women empowerment have occupied the front burners across the globe and in Nigeria where a significant percentage of women are well educated and widely travelled but are often schemed out of sensitive political offices these same line of conversations are a national pastime.
But again, due to inertia and lack of proper mobilisation, the
Nigerian women don't have any cohesive national platform for championing
the call for the fundamental rights of women to be accorded a priority
same as those that protect the other members of the human race- the men,
children and the aged.
Progressively, governments over the past years have systematically
infiltrated the National Council of Women Society which hitherto was the
notable national platform for the defense of the rights of women.
Political parties in power have over time saturated the hierarchy of
this body with some persons who lack the zeal, determination and passion
to drive through the process of the emancipation of the women who
mostly bear the burdens of taking care of their homes and the children.
With no major respectable forum to articulate and champion the cause of
women empowerment it has become increasingly impossible to put
tremendous pressure on government to respect the constitutional rights
of women.
Right now, as I write there is a widespread bottled up angst that the government at the centre has not sufficiently carried the women folks along in the composition of the cabinet level appointments except the token of handing them just a few cabinet level positions. Even the woman Miss Aisha Abubakar nominated as minister from Sokoto State is facing tumultuous challenges from the party hierarchy in Sokoto which felt cheated that no member of the political was chosen but rather a total political stranger was picked by the President to represent their state even after they laboured to win election for the All Progressives Congress (APS).
Away from politics, the issue of women empowerment has just received a
boost going by the intervention in the media credited to the Kano State
Governor, Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, in which he is proposing the
introduction of vocational skill acquisition for the Nigerian women as
strategic component of the entire scope of women economic empowerment.
Before we delve into the theme of women empowerment as encapsulated in
Governor Ganduje's intervention let us take a look at the legal
foundation of the international humanitarian laws that capture in
greater details the totality of the women, law and human rights as
stated in the book by Professor Joy Ngozi Ezeilo aptly titled : 'WOMEN,
LAW AND HUMAN RIGHTS'.
Ngozi Ezeilo a renowned rights activist wrote as follows: "A major step
taken by the United Nations to concretetise its recognition and
promotion of women's human rights was the establishment of the
commission on the status of women (CSW)."
She listed the achievements of this commission to include the adoption
of such laws as Convention on Nationality of Married Women; Convention
on the Political Rights of Women; Convention on Consent to Marriage,
Minimum Age of Marriage and Registration of Marriages and the
Declaration on the elimination of all forms of discriminations. Others
are, the Declaration on the Elimination of all forms of violence Against
Women (DEDAW); Convention on Elimination of all forms of Discrimination
Against Women (CEDAW).
It is therefore with joy that I read the Kano State governor say
something that practically brings to life the import of the
international law which abolishes all forms of discrimination against
women known as CEDAW.
Nigeria is a party to this global humanitarian law but we still
discriminate against our women in certain jobs and
opportunities.
The Kano State Governor, Dr. Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, is reported to have said that the time has come for women empowerment programmes to move from the primitive way of teaching them soap and sewing to more advanced vocational skills such as plumbing and technology-based businesses.
A certain Philosopher said rightly that 'there is no Army stronger than an IDEA whose time has come'. This Ganduje's take on women empowerment aforementioned is an idea whose time has come.
Ganduje who stated this revolutionary comment recently while declaring open the first ever Kano women development and strategic empowerment forum organised by the Ministry for Women Affairs and Social Development, said women have the ability to do such works that are mainly dominated by men, “Nothing will prevent a woman from becoming a plumber or an electrician like her male counterparts. If we have women in these vocations, we can allow them into our inner rooms to repair things that need such repairs.”
The media quoted him to have said that there was the need to restructure the economic base of the female gender to be at par with their male counterparts, “How can our women take advantage of new advances in technology, new approaches to marketing and new mediums of communication for instance to become more competitive in the market.”
The governor therefore charged the forum to dig deep on sensitive
issues that affect women and propose short and long term solutions that
could be integrated into government‘s action plan for women in the
state. Let me pray the governor to introduce a scholarship scheme
whereby Kano girls willing to study vocational course and core technical
engineering courses in post secondary educational faculties are funded
upto graduation and further assisted to obtain soft loans from finance
institutions to set up their workshops.
This is a step in the right direction. The Kano State governor has
therefore thrown a national challenge on the hierarchy of our policy
formulation structure at the national level to restructure the
fundamentals of women empowerment. The National University Commission
should learn good lesson from Dr. Ganduje and possibly plead with him to
do them a policy paper on this thematic area for the purposes of
further national debate and adoption as part of the university
curriculum in Nigeria so that Nigeria can begin to churn out creators of
wealth and not perennial job seekers.
Let the political parties set up workable structures for the real
economic empowerment of their women members because the moment we
empower our Nigerian women then we have opened the flood gates for
national prosperity.

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