Tag: Philip Obaji jnr

  • Obaji, Olamide others win Future Awards Africa

    Obaji, Olamide others win Future Awards Africa

    Nigerian education and children’s rights activist, Philip Obaji has received the 2015 Future Awards Africa Prize for Young Person of the Year, the biggest of eleven awards presented young Africans for inspiring work in the continent in the last eighteen months.

    The awards, which saw 11 outstanding young achievers rewarded for their excellent work across the continent in different fields ranging from entertainment, politics, business, education to science and technology, was hosted by singer and producer, Dare Art-Alade and South Africa’s leading On Air Personality, Bonang Matheba.

    Obaji, a champion of the Global Partnership for Education champion and a contributor to The Daily Beast, is known for his activism for rights to education for children, especially in North-east Nigeria, where the Islamist group, Boko Haram, has targeted schools, education campaigners, teachers and students.

    The Campaigner received the Future Awards Africa Prize in Education last year for his work in advocating for basic education for vulnerable children in northeast Nigeria through 1 GAME, an education campaigning initiative he founded in 2010.

    The Future Awards Africa, an initiative of The Future Project, celebrates young people between the ages of 18 and 31, who have made outstanding achievement in the year under consideration. Forbes has described the awards as “Most important awards for outstanding young Nigerians”, while the World Bank calls it “The Nobel Prize for young Africans”.

    Other winners are:

    The Future Awards Africa Prize in Advocacy & Activism

    Queen Baboloki (Botswana)

    The Future Awards Africa Prize in Education

    Lily Kudzro (Ghana)

    The Future Awards Africa Prize in Community Action

    Kelvin Mutize (Zimbabwe)

    The Future Awards Africa Prize in Enterprise Support

    Olufunbi Falayi (Nigeria)

    The Future Awards Africa Prize in Technology

    Rasheeda Mandeeya Yehuza (Ghana)

    The Future Awards Africa Prize in Entertainment

    Olamide “Badoo” Ayodeji (Nigeria)

    The Future Awards Africa Prize in Agriculture

    David Asiamah (Ghana)

    The Tony O. Elumelu Prize in Business

    Samuel Malinga (Uganda)

    The Future Awards Africa Prize in Public Service

    Emmanuel N. B. Flomo (Liberia)

    Ford Foundation Prize for Youth Employment Category

    Ukinebo Dare

    The 2015 edition of the Award, as it marks its 10th year anniversary, was supported by UBA Group and RED, in partnership with the US Consulate, Ford Foundation, the Canadian High Commission, Microsoft, British High Commission, Sterling Bank and The Tony Elumelu Foundation.

  • REVEALED: An account of Enugu notorious baby factory

    REVEALED: An account of Enugu notorious baby factory

    Eze, as we’ll call him, is an agent involved in Nigeria’s notorious baby trafficking ring. In a local restaurant in Nigeria’s southeastern city of Enugu, where dozens of people gather every evening to eat the city’s popular goat-meat pepper soup, and where all kinds of gossip can be heard, I overheard him talking to a middle-aged woman about the possibility of getting her a newborn child of any sex she requires.

    I walked up to him after the woman had left, and sought to find out if he truly sells babies.

    “Do you want a baby fresh from the womb?” he asked me.

    He thought I wanted to buy a baby, but in fact I was on a fact-finding mission.

    Eze claimed to be able to get me babies in less than 24 hours. He said that a baby, due to be born in a couple of days, was meant to go to a couple in Sweden but could be mine if I paid the cash in full immediately.

    “We’ll get another baby for this couple. They won’t even notice we’ve given them something else,” he said.

    I then told Eze I wanted to be taken to the factory, to be sure if the business was genuine before saying anything.

    “It wouldn’t work that way,” he said to me. “For security reasons, the women are kept in a hidden place. We don’t want any encounter with the police.”

    When I insisted I needed to see the babies before believing him, Eze said he could only take me to the woman who runs the factory, but with a condition that I paid him 10,000 naira (about $50).

    I was eager to find out how this trade was carried out, so I paid the money, and off we went—driving for about 20 minutes in a cab through slum neighborhoods late at night.

    Eze may be the agent for the business, but he isn’t very familiar with the area where his employer lives. On the two occasions he’s been there, it was under the cover of darkness, he said. He told me his boss deliberately took him to her home at night so he would not recognize the location of the place. That suggests some of the secrecy that shrouds this business.

    On the last part of the trip we were guided by a young boy who knew the woman we were looking for. He soon pointed at a gate, saying, simply, “It’s here”.

    We met Eze’s “Madam,” a middle-aged woman who introduces herself as “Madam Sarah” and asks us to follow her to the sitting room. She bid us have a seat and then turned to me. “Welcome, my son,” she said.

    “I have about six girls in my custody, and they are all heavily pregnant and expecting soon,” she said. “They are not here. I keep them in a secret location.”

    As we were talking, a young man walked in and whispered to her. After he had left, Madam Sarah turned to me and said: “That man is the biological father to many of the children we sell,” apparently to convince me that the babies she sells are not stolen.

    “His job is to get the girls pregnant, and he knows how to get the job done,” she said with a big smile.

    She went on to tell me that she charges 400,000 naira ($2,000) for a girl and 500,000 naira ($2,500) for a boy.

    She talked about the cost of caring for the mothers, justifying the price of the babies. “It’s expensive catering for these girls,” she said. “I give them food and shelter and pay the guys who sleep with them, but I let them go after they have given birth”.

    She claims she can arrange court orders and is able to get children of all ages, genders and complexions, and at any time. The police, she said, are not a problem for her.

    “What sex do you want?” she asked me. “A boy or a girl?”

    “He just came to find out if what I told him about this business was true,” Eze told her. She then turned to me and said: “Now you know it’s real. Come back when you’re ready.”

    I stood up and left, winding my way back to the waiting taxi, having glimpsed up close how the child trade mafia operates in Africa’s most populous country.

    Every year, the Nigerian security operatives discover several new baby factories. Young girls are held captive to give birth to babies who are then sold illegally either to adoptive parents, into slavery, or, it is said, for traditional rituals.

    There are rumors and fears that newborns are being sold to witch doctors for rituals in a country where there is a widespread belief in traditional communities that a powder made of infants brings luck. But, such sensational claims notwithstanding, the vast majority of buyers almost certainly are married couples struggling to conceive.

    A huge amount of the trade is carried out locally in Nigeria, but authorities suspect that babies also have been sold to people from Europe and the United States, and despite the controversy surrounding adoptions in Nigeria, many foreigners continue to seek infants here.

    There are several reasons given for the high patronage of baby factories.

    Security agencies say most places where the illegal baby trade occurs masquerade as non-governmental organizations or charitable homes for marginalized women. Operators of these places present themselves as humanitarians who take care of the pregnant teenagers in need.

    Human trafficking, including selling children, is prohibited under Nigerian law, but almost 10 years ago a UNESCO report on human trafficking in Nigeria identified the business as the country’s third-most common crime behind financial fraud and drug trafficking, and the situation certainly has not improved. At least 10 children are reportedly sold every day across the country.

    The scourge has intensified in the southeast, which is populated mainly by the Igbo ethnic group. Security officials have several ongoing undercover operations targeting suspected baby trafficking rings in Enugu State, underscoring the severity of the problem in this region.

    One measure taken by the government to check the proliferation of baby factories in the state has been to set up a committee on child adoption, and its research has suggested that the incidence of child trafficking and illegal adoptions has been on the rise because some security agencies and unscrupulous state officials aided the baby-sellers.

    “They are now being sold like commodities and, as a responsible government, we cannot allow this to continue to exist in Enugu State,” Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi, governor of Enugu, said while inaugurating the committee last month.

    “While we acknowledge the right and the necessity for the childless or benevolent couples to adopt motherless children and orphans,” the governor declared, “we believe that there is need for strict compliance with due process and the provisions of relevant laws to guarantee the security and well being of the affected children.”

    Eze and Madam Sarah, of course, have other ideas.

    By Philip Obaji Jr.

    Founder of 1 GAME, an advocacy and campaigning organization that fights for the right to education for disadvantaged children in Nigeria, especially in northeastern Nigeria, where Boko Haram forbids western education.

  • Obaji receives champion of education award

    Obaji receives champion of education award

    Nigerian education and child rights campaigner, Philip Obaji has been recognised with the Champion of Education for Peace and Development Award.

    Obaji was awarded on Saturday at a ceremony hosted by New Era Educational and Charitable Support Foundation (NEEDCSI) and Universal Peace Federation in Jos, capital of Nigeria’s north-central Plateau State.

    “The award recognizes and celebrates the extraordinary work of organizations and individuals who are rolling up their sleeves and making outstanding contributions to the development of education,” NEEDCSI said on its website.

    “Philip Obaji is a symbol of what the world needs: more unity,” Dr. Emmanuel Ande Ivorgba, Executive Director, NEEDCSI, said at the ceremony.

    “Through his work, he is sending an important positive message to the world about the importance of education for building peaceful and sustainable societies,” he added.

    Obaji, 30, is known for his activism for rights to education for Children, especially through his 1GAME campaign, which ensures education for all in northeastern Nigeria, where the insurgent Boko Haram has attacked schools and education personnel.

    The 1GAME campaigner has already been honoured with a host of awards, standing ovations and plaudits everywhere from Dakar to Washington D.C.

    “The world has witnessed all sorts of violence on children, but there is no greater violence than to deny the dreams of our children,” Obaji said during the ceremony.

    “I refuse to accept that in an open world, the quest for freedom should be the responsibility of only those directly afflicted with pain, but the responsibility of everyone,” he charged.

  • Obaji nominated for 2015 African Achievers Award

    Obaji nominated for 2015 African Achievers Award

    Nigerian education and children’s rights activist, Philip Obaji has been nominated for an African Achievers Award 2015.

    In short-listing Obaji, the organizers recognized the activists continued effort towards the development of Africa.

    Obaji, who was recently named a Global Partnership for Education champion and founder of 1 GAME Campaign, is known for his activism for rights to education for Children, especially in north-eastern Nigeria, where the Islamist group, Boko Haram forbids western education and has targeted schools, education campaigners, teachers and students among others.

    The African Achievers Awards is recognized by FORBES as one of the most prestigious honours in the African continent.

    The awards ceremony is aimed at recognizing excellent individuals and organizations that have distinguished themselves while contributing to the growth and development of Africa.

    The focus is to motivate all African leaders, including prospective leaders and the youth by recognizing individuals and organizations that have contributed remarkably to the development of Africa.

    The first African Achievers Awards, held on October 21, 2011, was presented to Arch Bishop Desmond Tutu in recognition for his fight for Human Right, Justice and Peace during his 80th Birthday celebration hosted by Kings College, London.

    Similarly, the 2012, 2013, and 2014 events were held in London, Nairobi, and Accra respectively.

    Former President of Malawi, Joyce Banda, and the late former President of Ghana, John Atta-Mills, are among previous winners of the Award in different categories.

    This year’s event is billed for July 25 at Sandston Convention Centre, Johannesburg, South Africa.

  • GPE lists Malala, Obaji as ‘education champions’

    GPE lists Malala, Obaji as ‘education champions’

    Nobel Laureate, Malala Yousafzai and Nigerian activist Philip Obaji are among eight education advocates named by the Global Partnership for Education (GPE) as champions.

    The young activists join a group of global education advocates, adding their voices to support the GPE’s work in almost 60 low-income countries to ensure every child receives a quality, basic education.

    As GPE Champions, Malala, Obaji and other advocates will be speaking up for the rights of children, to an education – and urging governments, business and civil society to work together to fulfill the long-standing pledge of delivering education for all.

    Malala, who last year became the youngest ever Nobel Prize Winner, said on GPE website: “Education is the right of every girl, every human being. I’m proud to be a champion for the Global Partnership for Education.

    “I believe all countries can do more, rich countries must do their part and keep their promises, and developing countries must give more of their own budgets to education.”

    Malala further added that every student knows what it is like to take an exam. “I hope world leaders will pass their own test and resolve to keep their promises every day, in every country, in every classroom,” she said.

    Similarly, Obaji, who won The Future Africa Awards Prize in Education last December, said: “As a children’s rights activist, I’ve worked with the most violated, traumatized and forgotten children in northern Nigeria.

    “I have seen children physically and mentally tortured, forcibly conscripted into armed groups, and forced to leave their homes. But I have also witnessed the transformative power of education.”

    Obaji also added that the Global Partnership for Education has helped many developing countries, including Nigeria, take the right path in their education systems.

    “As a result, millions of children are back in school, and funding is increasing for education in many places.”

    Besides Nigeria’s Obaji and Malala, the team of advocates who are championing the GPE course include, World At School co-founder, Chernor Bah; Dutch Youth Representative to UNESCO, Frits Brouwer and UNICEF Australia Young Ambassador, Hayley McQuire.

    Others include Canadian advocate and President of OneChild, Cheryl Perera; President of Leonard Cheshire Young Voices, Guyana; Leroy Philips, and Cameroonian advocate and Member of the United Nations Global Education First Initiative Youth Advocacy Group, Bertheline Nina Tchangoue are other young advocates championing the GPE cause.

  • We can defeat violence with education – Obaji

    We can defeat violence with education – Obaji

    Philip Obaji Jr. is the founder of the 1 GAME Campaigns advocating basic primary education for the over 10.5 million out-of-school children in Nigeria. Obaji, who is also a Global Youth Ambassador, spoke to David Lawal on Boko Haram and it political undertone, Chibok girls and government’s role in education. 

    Kindly give a brief insight into your background?

    I was born on August 8, 1985 in a town called Ogoja in Northern Cross River State. I am the founder of the 1 GAME Campaign, which promotes basic primary education for vulnerable kids in Nigeria. I am widely known for my activism for rights to education for Children, especially in Northeastern Nigeria. I’m a graduate of Marine Biology from the University of Calabar; a Global Youth Ambassador for United Nations critical education partner, A World at School; a member of International Network for Education in Emergencies; and a champion of Global Partnership for Education. Back home, I am an Executive Committee member of the Cross River State Football Association. I am soft spoken, a Roman Catholic and a man of peace. I believe in Nigeria and in every citizen of this country. And I want to play a role in making it a better place for all of us.

    How long have you been into education advocacy?

    I’ve been working for close to five (5) years now in education advocacy. It all started in 2010 when 1 GAME Campaign was founded.

    What informed your decision to start education advocacy?

    In 2009, I travelled to Ogoja where I was born. I had not visited the town since my family moved in 1988 when I was just three years old. I wanted to learn more about the place I first lived as a child.

    I have had numerous conversations with my father about Ogoja, and he would often speak about its people, and how he missed them and their culture. Once arriving in Ogoja after a six-hour journey from Calabar, where I live, I was greeted by a group of young boys and girls at the bus stop, who rushed to me, begging for money.

    The children were between six and fourteen years. When I asked them where they came from, they confessed that they were ‘Almajiris’ from Northern Nigeria.

    They had followed a lorry transporting goods from Maiduguri in Borno State to Ogoja. They said they jumped into the lorry without knowing the driver and had no idea of where the vehicle was heading.

    I was overwhelmed by the presence of so many out-of-school children and could not stop thinking about their plight and how to solve this crisis.

    Thereafter I found 1 GAME Campaign aiming specifically at Almajiris helping them to enrol and complete their basic education. The name ‘1 GAME’ means that anyone involved in the campaign is asked to defeat violence, illiteracy and poverty – using education as a tool.

    What is your disposition to the target on children across the world?

    There is absolutely no justification for the target on children. Terrorists all over the world target children in order to strike fear and gain publicity.

    Boko Haram for instance, gained global acclaim after the Chibok abductions. They got exactly what they were looking for. There are lots of similarities between Boko Haram which operates here in Nigeria, and the Taliban which operates in Pakistan.

    While they both want to enforce full Sharia Law all over Nigeria and Pakistan respectively, they also wanObajit to ensure that there is no place for western education in the areas they operate.

    But let’s not also forget that beyond these things, there is a political undertone to their existence.

    About a year since the abduction of school girls from Chibok, what are the chances of seeing the return of these girls?

    Honestly, no one is sure about the where about or wellbeing of the Chibok girls except their captors. There have been lots of rumours about them.

    In fact, as we speak, there’s a video circulating around Maiduguri purportedly showing Boko Haram militants raping young girls and shooting those who refused to get laid.

    Many people who have seen this video say the girls in the footage are the abducted Chibok girls, but I haven’t been able to get anyone to confirm if that’s true.

    I can’t really say for sure if the Chibok girls are alive or dead or if they are safe where they are. Since there hasn’t been a word for some months from Boko Haram about the girls, no one can be sure about their wellbeing, and whether or not they’ll return.

    Considering the present state of education in Nigeria, where do you think we got it wrong?

    It started from the attitude of the government, and the trend is still continuing. The problem with Nigeria’s education has to do with poor planning, poor funding, and in some quarters, corruption. Take primary education, for instance, the Universal Basic Education Scheme was designed to provide compulsory, free education up to Junior Secondary levels, to be funded by both the Federal and State Governments. The Federal Government keeps 2 percent of the Consolidated Revenue Fund into the scheme and allocates money to the states when the states contribute its matching amounts.

    However, we’ve found out that most of the states never made their matching grants, denying themselves access to the funds; and in states where they had been given the grants, the education sector there is still pathetic. That tells you that these governments are not making education their priority.

    The population of out-of-school children in Nigeria according to UNESCO is equal to the total population of the entire Czech Republic (10.5 million), who do you think is responsible for this?

    The government has the biggest role to play in ensuring Education for All. In 2000, at the World Education Forum in Dakar, Senegal, 180 countries including Nigeria signed up to make the six goals of Education For All happen, committing to putting legal frameworks, policies and finance in place so that everyone, no matter what their circumstances, could have an education – one that is available, accessible, acceptable and adaptable.

    The richest countries pledged to help make Education for All a reality by committing to principles of international cooperation towards those countries with fewer financial resources.

    Commitment towards the right to education was also reflected in the United Nations Millennium Development Goals, set in 2000 with a deadline for achievement by 2015.

    Out of the eight Millennium Development Goals, two focus on education. Both the EFA and MDG goals are all centred on what governments should do, and not what parents or children should do to create access to education.

    But as much as the government has a huge role to play, we as citizens must encourage and drive our children to education. Teachers must inspire. Principals must lead. Parents must instil a thirst for learning. And students have got to do the work in school. And if we can all do this together, I assure you we will build great ideas and push this nation away from the stronghold of extremists.

    What’s your advice to government on providing education for all?

    The government must show more seriousness in achieving the goals of Education for All. Education is achievable if government mobilises the political will and available resources. The government must recognise that education is a universal human right; that it is the key to poverty alleviation and sustainable human development; and of course, education is its core responsibility. In doing so, it must ensure increased provision of quality early childhood education and care; the eradication of adult illiteracy and a second chance to learn for youth and adults who miss out on formal schooling; an end to child labour; democratic participation of, and accountability to, civil society, including teachers and their unions, in education decision-making at all levels; fair and regular salaries for teachers; properly equipped classrooms and a supply of quality textbooks; inclusive and non-discriminatory provision of services for all; the mobilization of political will and new resources in support of National Education plans to realize the EFA Goals, including adequate public expenditure of at least 6 percent of GNP. Without this in place, it would be difficult to achieve Education for All.

    In doing so, it must ensure increased provision of quality early childhood education and care; the eradication of adult illiteracy and a second chance to learn for youth and adults who miss out on formal schooling; an end to child labour; democratic participation of, and accountability to, civil society, including teachers and their unions, in education decision-making at all levels; fair and regular salaries for teachers; properly equipped classrooms and a supply of quality textbooks; inclusive and non-discriminatory provision of services for all; the mobilization of political will and new resources in support of National Education plans to realize the EFA Goals, including adequate public expenditure of at least 6 percent of GNP. Without this in place, it would be difficult to achieve Education for All.