Tag: Privacy

  • Growing importance of privacy amongst customers

    Growing importance of privacy amongst customers

    By Kehinde Ogundare and Veerakumar Natarajan

    Privacy is a growing concern for technology consumers worldwide. While there was a time when that may not have been the case for countries like Nigeria and Kenya, that’s no longer the reality. As connectivity becomes more affordable and ubiquitous, Kenyans and Nigerians have become increasingly tech-savvy and conscious regarding how much data they share with technology companies and what the latter are doing with it.

    In the face of these growing concerns, companies operating in Africa need to be mindful of the increasing privacy mindset of their customers. Aside from regulatory compliance, companies should actively demonstrate that they care about their customers’ privacy concerns in order to build and sustain trust and to show they’re taking a proactive approach to protect their personal information.

    The importance of regulatory compliance

    The first step any company should take to safeguard their customers’ privacy is ensuring they’re compliant with all of the relevant laws and regulations. In countries like Kenya and Nigeria, data protection regulations are relatively new.

    The Data Protection Act of 2019, enforced by the Office of the Data Protection Commissioner (ODPC), regulates data protection in Kenya. The act expressly prohibits organisations from processing personal data if their consent has not been provided first. Each organisation must have a data controller and/or a data processor whose responsibility is to prove they’ve obtained consent before processing a person’s data.

    Nigeria’s Data Protection Act, meanwhile, was signed into law in 2023. The act governs both manual and automatic data processing. The act also established the Nigeria Data Protection Commission (NDPC), which is an independent body that governs data protection and regulation in the country. In addition to defining sensitive personal data as including an individual’s genetic and biometric data as well as their race, ethnicity, and health status, among other things, the act also provides specific grounds for the processing of this sensitive personal data. According to the act, such data can be processed where consent is provided or where processing is necessary for social security or employment laws.

    Both of these laws are in line with similar laws and regulations around the world, such as Europe’s GDPR. That means they’re not only a good place for Nigerian and Kenyan businesses to start for compliance, but they also help businesses gain good footing when it comes to protecting customer data should they start operating internationally.

    Beyond compliance

    Companies should, however, view regulatory compliance as the bare minimum when it comes to meeting their customers’ privacy needs. Given the parlous state of privacy protection across many African countries, going above and beyond with customer privacy can be a positive differentiator for companies that get it right.

    Among the initiatives they can undertake in this direction are investing in data center security to minimise the collection of data, requesting permission from customers while collecting sensitive information, and ultimately reducing their reliance on selling user data for revenue gains. Another initiative that organisations can implement is implementing multi-factor authentication if they require customers to log in to an account to access their products and services.

    Another aspect that businesses should pay close attention to is which technology vendor they work with to run their internal operations. Businesses should ensure the third-party tech tools they deploy within their IT infrastructure also come with strong data privacy and protection controls, and the corresponding vendors also practice transparent data collection practices. Should one of these vendors fall victim to a cybersecurity breach, the customer data of the organisations using it could easily fall into nefarious hands.

    Businesses should, therefore, ensure they make use of software providers and vendors that are, themselves, compliant with all the relevant privacy laws and regulations, and offer a comprehensive set of security measures and procedures, including controlled user access, enterprise mobility management (EMM) integration, IP restrictions, and secure integrations.

    Riding the positives of proactive protection

    While there are many negatives associated with data protection failures, including reputational damage and legal punishments, it’s also important that organisations understand the positives associated with proactive data protection.

    High up on the list of those positives is building trust. Customers who trust the companies they buy from are more likely to be loyal in the long term, make repeat purchases in the future, and act as evangelists to others. At a time when customers are increasingly concerned about data privacy, building that trust is more difficult, but also more rewarding than ever. It, in other words, is something worth investing in.

    Kehinde Ogundare is the Country Manager, Zoho Nigeria while Veerakumar Natarajan is the Country Head – Kenya, Zoho Corp.

  • FG laments 30 % compliance with data privacy laws

    FG laments 30 % compliance with data privacy laws

    The federal government at the weekend lamented that Nigeria is yet to achieve 30 percent compliance with data protection regulations and laws by private and public sectors despite the sectors’ massive potentials.

    It however said there were improvements within the past two years.

    The National Commissioner and Chief Executive Officer of the Nigeria Data Protection Commission (NDPC), Vincent Olatunji, who disclosed this, noted that a lot needed to be done to achieve substantial compliance with the laws.

    He made the remarks at the Innov 8 Tech Hub, Abuja, at the weekend during the Hackathon organised by the Commission for young innovators and entrepreneurs from Nigeria universities.

    Olatunji said compliance from the country’s financial institutions have increased to 29 percent, while the levels of compliance by public institutions has moved from about 5 percent to 9 percent within the past two years.

    He attributed the increase in compliance to capacity building, awareness creation, support from the media, investigations of alleged data breaches, and sanctions imposed on institutions for infractions.

    Olatunji said the Hackathon was organised to create awareness, and build capacity, adding that the Commission was “looking for indigenous solutions that can drive the private sector ecosystem in Nigeria as well as policy dialogue looking at emerging issues around the laws.”

    He said: “What can we do around the laws recently signed by President Bola Tinubu so that the law is properly implemented on data protection and privacy.

    “Capacity building, we have been able to achieve this within the week, and globally, it is usually on the 28th of January that we celebrate the global Data Management week. But here, we celebrate the awareness throughout one week.

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    “This year’s own has been very successful, for instance, what we are doing here today, Hackathon. This is the first time we are having this. We are doing this to look for indigenous solutions that can drive or address the challenges within the law in terms of the law itself, investigating, reporting, and self assessment.

    “If you are developing an application, we want to evaluate what you have done. So to see if it is really in compliance with the privacy law in the country. And for this to be coming out of the universities, I think it is something that is really important and we are really happy.”

    On the levels of compliance, Olatunji said:”We are not there yet, but it’s getting better. Where we were 5 years ago is not where we were 4 years ago and 3 years ago.

    “It has never happened before and we have proceeded with actions. For instance things are getting better in the public sector. When we started, the level of compliance was just 5 % . Within a year, plus other things that did by getting a circular from the office of the Secretary to the Government of Federation (SGF) for other agencies to key in, it is close to 9 percent.

    “In the financial sector, it was about 29 percent. But things have changed now. So it is like a process or journey we have started and we are making progress gradually. We are not there yet, and globally no country can say they are already there, especially in the areas of data privacy.”

  • Celebrity status, privacy and younger generation

    Celebrity status, privacy and younger generation

    By Al-Janat Mohammed

    SIR: The distinction between one’s private and public life is becoming more and more hazy at a time when social media dominates. Celebrities, who were formerly admired for their abilities and accomplishments, now have to navigate a world in which the public is interested in every aspect of their lives.

    The younger generation have been influenced by this culture of perpetual exposure, as they readily divulge personal information online, undermining the idea of privacy. The story of Nigerian actor, Yul Edochie, and his second wife is a compelling illustration of this phenomenon, and offers a prism through which to consider the effects of this invasion of privacy.

    Without a doubt, the emergence of social media has completely changed how people communicate, making it possible to share information instantly with anyone on the planet. The loss of personal boundaries that results from people voluntarily disclosing their private lives to the world is the drawback, though.

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    Because they are in the public glare, celebrities have been hardest hit by this cultural change. For example, Yul Edochie’s second marriage turned into a social media show, with every detail of their union, family dynamics, and personal hardships exposed to everybody with just an internet connection.

    Beyond just celebrities, this tendency affects the younger generation as well, who have grown up in a time of continual communication. Many people reveal personal information about themselves online because they want to be validated and accepted by others.

    The younger generation frequently compromises privacy in the chase of likes, comments, and virtual acceptance, whether it be for relationship milestones or personal struggles. This raises questions about how such behaviour may affect people’s general well-being, self-esteem, and mental health in the long run.

    Although the loss of privacy is a complicated problem with wide-ranging effects on society, there may be ways to lessen its effects. Above all, it is critical to teach the next generation the value of establishing and upholding limits. Giving people the skills to decide what parts of their lives are best kept private helps them feel more in charge of their own story.

    Prioritising digital literacy education is important, with a focus on the lasting nature of online content and the possible repercussions of excessive sharing.

    Social media sites can also be extremely important in encouraging responsible sharing. Pop-up reminders and privacy checklists are two examples of features that can be implemented to encourage users to reconsider sharing sensitive information and prevent impulsive sharing.

    Platforms should also make investments in strong privacy settings so that users may decide who can see their content. Encouraging social media usage in a way that is balanced and respects one’s personal limits sends a strong message about how important privacy protection is.

    In the end, the degradation of privacy in the era of celebrity culture is a complex problem that calls for cooperation from people, organisations, and digital platforms. Fostering a healthier connection with the digital world requires finding a balance between the advantages of connectedness and the maintenance of personal boundaries.

    We may endeavour to create a culture that values and respects privacy in an increasingly connected world by embracing responsible sharing behaviours, encouraging digital literacy, and setting positive examples.

    • Al-Janat Mohammed, (NYSC) Abuja.   

  •  Digital surveillance and privacy: The uncharted path under Nigerian law

     Digital surveillance and privacy: The uncharted path under Nigerian law

    Akinpelu Oluwatobi, a Netherland-based lawyer writes on digital surveillance technology used during the arrest of judges and the recent direction by President Muhammadu Buhari authorising military surveillance on social media to address the issue of hate speeches and anti-government remarks

    Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Great men are almost always bad men, even when they exercise influence and not authority: still more when you super-add the tendency or the certainty of corruption by authority. There is no worse heresy, than, that the office sanctifies the holder of it”.

    Notwithstanding the lon-gevity of the statement, Nigeria’s history validates the statement. Nigeria has a country with a chequered history of military rule has experienced the coercive force of state power, which was exercised through various security agencies and the military. A predominant feature of this orchestrated oppression during the various interjection of military rule in Nigeria is the state surveillance of Nigerians. However, with the return to democracy, mass state surveillance has been checked by the Constitution, by separating powers between different arms of government. Nigeria’s constitution not only separates power between the various arms but also empowers government with the authority to administer the country for the well-being of Nigerians. These constitutional powers are nevertheless subject to various limitations include the observance of the fundamental right of citizens, such rights are inclusive of the right to a private and family life.

    The constitutional power of the various arm of government is enshrined in Chapter II of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (CFRN) 1999, specifically in Sec. 5(1)(a) CFRN 1999,  which provides that the executive powers of the Nigerian Federation shall be vested in the President and may subject as aforesaid and to the provisions of any law made by the National Assembly, be exercised by him either directly or through the Vice-President and Ministers of the Government of the Federation or officers in the public service of the Federation; and further requires by the provision of Sec. 5(1)(b) CFRN 1999 that such powers shall be for the execution and maintenance of the Constitution; all laws made by the National Assembly; and to all matters with respect to which the National Assembly has, for the time being, power to make laws.It is against this backdrop, that it becomes sacrosanct that government must not only obey the constitution and other laws but must also seek to protect and promote peaceful coexistence as well as deepen the integration of all Nigerians. It is also the duty of government to ensure the betterment of the welfare of Nigerians. In seeing to these responsibilities, government is saddled with the responsibility to tackle challenges that face the country including corruption and ethnic division which has long held the Nigerian entity bound from achieving its fullest potentials.

    Admittedly, Nigeria has been plagued by untrustworthy political leaders and malfunctioning public institutions that has depraved vast majority of its citizens, food, clothing and shelther; while a few powerful ones live a lavish and excessive lifestyle. According to Transparency International, Nigeria ranks among the top fifty corrupt countries in the world. Corruption has thrived in Nigeria not because the anti-corruption laws are not in the books but as a result of the systemic ignorance of the regulation and lack of political will to enforce sanctions. However, with the assumption of this current administration, there has been a renewed drive towards building strong public institutions that are rid of corrupt practices through the enforcement of anti-corruption regulations. The effectiveness of the criminal justice system is however hinged on successful investigation, apprehension, trial and eventually conviction of culpable persons.Also challenging is the rise of hate speeches and ethnic threats that continues to polarise the country along ethnic and religious lines. Technological invasion and the continuing rise in the use of social media therefore becomes a readily available tool for ignorant persons as well criminals to propagate their hate messages calculated at disrupting peace and stability in the country. Fortunately, technology does not only allow for the propagation of hate crime; it also provides new possibilities in aiding law enforcement officers in the investigation, apprehension and trial of accused persons but an unrestrained use could as well lead into deprivation of fundamental human rights and an abuse of legislations as it is been witnessed in Nigeria.

    The unrestrained use of technology by state power was prominently witnessed in Nigeria when the Department for State Security (DSS) sometimes in October 2016, made use of surveillance technology to track and arrest suspected judges who had allegedly been involved in corrupt practices. This use of surveillance technology is set again to be used at the direction of the federal government; that the military begins to monitor Nigerians on social media in order to checkmate hate speeches, anti-government and anti-security information. While there exists no privacy legislation in Nigeria, Sec.37 CFRN 1999provides that the privacy of citizens, their homes, correspondence, telephone conversations and telegraphic communications is hereby guaranteed and protected;but this right is not exclusive as Sec. 45(1) CFRN 1999 provides that the right to private life can be dispensed with for public interest and for the protection of the rights and freedom of other persons. Without gainsaying, the federal government is saddled with the responsibility of tackling corruption and hate speeches that threatens the sovereignty of Nigeria, but are these responsibilities sufficient to warrant digital surveillance and breach privacy right?

    A combined reading of Sec.37 CFRN 1999 and Sec. 45(1)(a) CFRN 1999 would seem sufficient to condone the recent digital surveillance invasion being conducted by state security services and the military. But, a further reading of the opening paragraph of Sec. 45(1) CFRN 1999 requires that before Sec.37 CFRN 1999 can be breached in the interest of the public or for the protection of the rights and freedom of other persons; circumstances to warrant such breach must be stated by law. Hence, the right to a private life as enshrined in the constitution cannot be breached by the need to enforce a constitutional duty or at the direction of the President or any person saddled with the executive powers of the state in the absence of a legislative framework to warrant such breach. While the intended result of digital surveillance is legal, it has been judicial established that the illegality cannot aid a legal process,1 so not just must the end result be legal, the whole process leading to the end result must also be within the ambit of law. In light of this dilemma, would it then be appropriate for state security agencies and the military to jettison the advantage of digital surveillance in achieving their constitutional responsibilities?

    State security agencies and the military need not jettison the advantage of digital surveillance in achieving their mandate. However, what is needed is a criminal justice privacy legal framework that safeguards against abuse of intrusion by security agencies and the military. The legal framework must provide for the legal authority that is competent to authorise the use of surveillance technology. Since the level of legal authority indicates the potential privacy infringement the legislator permits, it is advised that the legal authority be thrusted upon the court, in order to separate authorisation and executory duties and to create for checks and balances within the system. It is also essential that the legal framework clearly delineates the crimes for which the use of such technology is allowed. The severity of the crime or the gravity of the conduct being sought to be curbed should act as a prime indicator for which potential privacy infringement and digital surveillance is allowed. It also necessary to require the existence of relationship between the suspect and the crime taking into consideration the probability of the surveillance targeting only the suspects without infringing on the privacy rights of non-suspects. Without this requirement, there is a likelihood of a broad use of digital surveillance and consequently privacy infringement of citizens. In legislating a criminal justice privacy legal framework, there is a need for subsidiarity. The requirement of subsidiarity, is the consideration as to the extent which such power may be used in comparison with other less intrusive powers. For instance it may be required that before the use of digital surveillance by security agencies and the military, consideration has to be given to urgency, reasonable need and the general interest of on-going investigation.Further, the legislation must specify the object of investigation, as the more general an object is defined in law, the broader the scope of powers. Therefore the generality or specificity of the power to use such intrusive technology must be specified by law. For example, the power to intercept voice communication differs from the power to intercept all forms of communication. Also, there has to be a standard of need, that is, does the investigatory agency have a probable cause or a reason to believe that such intrusive technology is necessary for their investigation? Finally, in order to ensure compliance by the security agencies and the military, it is important that the legislation, creates a check that forces compliance. Such measure can be the exclusion of any evidence obtained without adherence to the legislation. In other words, the legislation can make use of the principle of “the fruit of a poisoned tree” in order to safeguard against abuse of the legislation and ensure the perseverance of privacy right in a digital age.

  • HOW I  MANAGE  MY PRIVACY–NOLLYWOOD ACTRESS UZOR OSIMKPA

    HOW I MANAGE MY PRIVACY–NOLLYWOOD ACTRESS UZOR OSIMKPA

    Though she has been in the industry for over a decade, Nollywood actress, Uzor Osimkpa, says that with acting she feels a sense of wholesomeness. The thespian who plays Adaku in the acclaimed sitcom, Do Good, has also featured in several successful TV series like Flat Mates, Shallow Waters, Edge of Paradise among others. She speaks with OVWE MEDEME on her staying power among other issues. 

    FOR how long have you been an actress?

    I never like doing that but I think it’s been about 12 years now. By the time I started I was just getting out of the university so yes, I was pretty young but not as a child actor.

    With over a decade in the movie industry, what has been your staying power?

    I would say it has been resilience, passion and the fact that there is nowhere to go. This is where I want to be, this is where I feel a sense of wholesomeness. When I’m doing this, when I’m here, I don’t feel like I need to be anywhere else. I don’t feel like I need to do anything else.

    When you say there’s nowhere to go, doesn’t it sound like you are putting all your eggs in one basket?

    I’m not putting any egg in any basket. There is nowhere to go in that I’m content with who I am being an actor. I don’t see myself doing anything else. That is the best of myself that I can be. The ability to be able to play several characters and still be me is a gift and I don’t take it for granted that I have the opportunity to have been doing this for as long as I have been and still be here. It has been a while but it’s been paying the bills, it’s been taking care of stuff.

    What informs your love for acting?

    You know how when you just feel something in your insides, you can’t do anything about it except be that thing that you are called to be. It’s a calling and you know that if you do not stay in the calling, with the calling, answer to the call, you will be living short of yourself, short of the life that you have been destined to live. Its destiny; it is who I’m called to be, it is who I want to be. It is who I’m known to be; an actor, interpreting roles and doing them tastefully.

    Was there a time you considered giving it all up?

    Yes, there have been times like that but I’m not known to back down in any situation. In fact, when something seems more difficult, I feel more urge to go at it with everything that I have. So there’s never really been doubt of whether I will make it in this field. Yes, there might be some sort of insecurity, questioning the calling but I have to do it despite the highs, the lows, the good times or the bad times.

    What has been your lowest moment as an actress?

    I honestly do not keep records of my lows. I can tell you about my highs.

    Tell us about your highs then

    Very early on in my career, I got the opportunity to work with BBC World Service Trust. I went on auditions as a rookie almost and I got the role. We were flown into Abuja to shoot at the time. This was in 2005. We did a pilot series that went on to become a full blown series and was shown around the country.

    That was for the sitcom, Wetin Dey. Also, I’ve been working with Mnet since 2005 in different projects. I’ve been on and off with them but more on than off. Every year since 2005, I’ve done something with Mnet. So, it’s been fulfilling for me, but it’s still not enough because there is so much to conquer, there’s so much more to do, there’s so much more to be. There’s Hollywood to go to. When you keep a dream alive and you know that there’s something to look forward to, that is your staying power.

    Have you ever found any role so challenging, you had to reject it?

    Uzor 2Yes, I found the role that I’m currently playing, which is Adaku on Do Good television comedy series very challenging. I was invited for the reading and when I got there and I realised what I was supposed to do and how much was expected of the character, I told them I didn’t want to do it, that they should just consider me for something else. I couldn’t do that. I’ve never had to say that ever before because I feel I can do anything through Christ who strengthens me.

    Before I got there, somebody had dampened my mood and I was upset. But that wasn’t enough reason for me to say I wasn’t going to take on a role. I didn’t even have a contender for it. Other people were considered but I didn’t have to contend with them, so to say. I didn’t even think I did so well with my audition because I didn’t think I presented it the way it would have been expected of me. That was the only time and hopefully that would be the only time I would have to turn down a role. I’ve done really challenging roles that took me out of my whole essence that I even fell ill. This was for theatre. Theatre is actually more challenging because there are no levels there. It’s all high.

    Between theatre and the screens, which do you find more fulfilling?

    There is a huge sense of fulfillment with theatre. Even when you know that when the curtains come down, it’s over, there is still the sense of hurray. And it’s not a one man’s job, except you are doing one man theatre.

    When you finish, that is when it ends. It’s an out of body experience for me. That has also made me, because most of the theatre productions that I’ve taken on, I’m still taking them because I’ve gotten other offers that I didn’t take. The ones that I’ve taken on were challenging. They always made me go far. I had to always push the button, push the envelope far. I can’t really explain it.

    Are you exploring other aspects of the arts?

    Oh yes, I am. I’m going to do it all. Maybe not all but I’m going to take it in my stride. If I’m going to do it at all, I have to do it right so I don’t feel ready to do it just yet. But a time will come when I will have to do it well. It has to be tasteful. Because if I’m going to do it at all, I must do it well. That is what I believe. Then again, there is the issue of time and chance. The time has to be right and the chance has to be there. When they come together, it will be a good picture.

    Are you married?

    Goodness, I’m single. Not yet married is what I am.

    What was growing up like for you?

    Growing up was interesting. I had a very interesting childhood. A lot of what I know today is a function of the family that I am from. My family is close knit. Everybody is interested in what the other person is doing. There is no distance. I know what my siblings are doing at every point in time. I know what my parents are doing at every point in time. We are interested in ourselves.

    It is not a see finish thing. I love the fact that my parents trust me to take my own decisions. My father would, even in my absence, say he knows what I would do. It gives me a sense of worth, a sense of fulfillment. That’s my root. That’s everything that I am. I grew up in Lagos. I’m the second of four children. I daresay I had everything that I wanted growing up. My father gave me just about everything I wanted at the appropriate time. I wasn’t spoilt. Dem beat me ehn. If my father beat you. My father is a very strict disciplinarian.

    You seem attached to your father…

    Yes, we are cool. Nothing goes unpunished with him. I’m close to both my parents. In fact I probably speak to my mum more than I do my father but I revere my father. He’s a demigod. My parents are cool jare. I would not want to be from anywhere else. if things were different, I’m sure that they will be with me every step of the way.

    What did you study in school?

    I studied Education Economics at Abia State University. I graduated in 2004 and I went for NYSC for my dad because left for me, I wouldn’t have gone for that. It turned out to be my best years. I served in Kaduna State. It was a beautiful one year. I didn’t serve until 2007 and my father forced me. When I came back, I gave him my certificate.

    Did you have to look for a job?

    By 2003 before I graduated, I was already going for auditions. And the first audition I went for, I got cast in it. I went on to do House Sisters with KP Cyprus. Flat Mates, Shallow Waters, Edge of Paradise, Doctors Quarters and so on. so, I was busy. I even did a film in Enugu back then. The moment I got out of school, I already knew this is what I was coming out to be. I never applied for any job.

    Although, in 2008 or thereabout, I worked for about a year with True Tales Communication. I was writing for them at the time. Then I went on to become Head of Media. I got two promotions at the time I worked with them in a period of nine months. Every time I was there, I just felt like something was missing. My friends were going for auditions and I didn’t have the time to go. But every now and then, I still went on to shoot.

    Is there any part of your privacy that  has been stolen from you?

    Not really, because I manage myself well enough to not put out what I do not want out there.

  • Cutting away a young woman’s right to personal pride, privacy, pleasure, personality and possibly reproduction

    Sex and reproduction:

    In a busy outpatient Gynaecology clinic, a Professor asked  a young lady that had been  investigated exhaustively  for primary infertility a few questions concerning sex with her husband ; was sex  more frequent around mid cycle, and regular? She answered in the affirmative. When asked  if she enjoyed sex with him, she said there were no problems, but  asked to recall two three times she experienced orgasm, she claimed such things only happened  between  couples who are not born again. With controlled anger, the Consultant Gynaecologist  referred her to the counselling unit .

    Inability to reach orgasm during penovaginal sex(aorgasmic coitus) has been found to be associated with certain cases of infertility.  Particularly in women married to men with borderline or low sperm count, the little sperm cells produced (normal ejaculate should fill up a teaspoon) may also have problems with morphology as well as with motility. Ability of the couple to achieve pregnancy may in that situation depend on the ability of the woman to create enough negative(sucking )pressure in the endo cervix, uterus and up to the outer fallopian tube so sperm cells can swim up stream and fertilize ovum.  Without adequate counselling the chances of this occurring are lower in conditions of persistent aorgasmic coitus.

    Infection in the genitor urinary tract introduced during genital manipulation , cutting or mutilation is  capable of blocking the fallopian tubes, the inner walls of which are liable to become organised and plastic in the growing female child. When that happens, even the uterus could become underdeveloped.  The result is infertility or abortions(miscarriages) during the life of the woman

    During pregnancy, nearly all organs of the body are increased in size; some more than others.  The clitoris and the adjoining small lips of the vagina are no exemption; the observed changes are physiological and  except in the case of the breast and other major organs, will come back to pre pregnancy status. During the third(last) stage of normal  labour , baby’s head stretches every thing in the opening of the birth canal . For large babies(normal birth weight of Nigerian babies on the average=3.5kg), a mother may suffer lacerations or bruises in the areas at the top, bottom and sides of the vagina. These may involve significant bleeding when they involve prominent blood vessels. Doctors prevent these by giving neat surgical cuts and repairing them almost immediately after. In women that have had genital cutting, the protective cushion offered by the structures that are removed is taken away.  Back of baby’s head comes into direct contact with the under surface of the pubic bone and because the pain felt in this region is different from the pain felt as a result of contraction of the uterus(womb), the woman pushes baby out even at the risk of having the cervix torn to pieces and bleeding to death because she is simply unable to bear the agonizing pain.  Post partum pain is also more severe for the same reasons

    Conclusion

    In spite of  the efforts by governments, individuals and organizations to  remove the falsehood and myth about female genital cutting ,inform and educate  the public about the dangers associated with the practice , many communities in Nigeria have refused to break with tradition and embrace change. Ignorance , poverty and failure of Governments to enforce rights of the child are responsible for the situation and must be reasonably considered if the resistance to change can be overcome.

    It is clear from what has been discussed in this article that removing the clitoris does not dampen a woman’s appetite for sex  because other parts of the body are designed by the creator to behave  in exactly the same way as the clitoris. Cutting away the clitoris  in some women creates instead, situations where it becomes difficult to understand and define sexual arousal in terms of commencement, peak etc.  The wound that is caused heals with scar formation and the resulting distortion brings about chronic pain and mixed sensations that do not respond to treatment. The bottom line is that  once in an atmosphere of sex, the woman with an amputated clitoris finds her emotions oscillating ; if it manages to ascend, it might reach a level where it hangs and then it may take days to stabilize. The clitoris like other organs of the body affects emotional health and vice versa. It should therefore be left undisturbed so that the body remains emotionally balanced.

    Recommendations

    It is time governments and legislators organized an update on the rights of children

    Many of our Moms and Dads are not aware of the child right acts ,and so children die every day from circumstances that are avoidable from neglect to acts of omission and others that could have directly or indirectly caused death.

    Emphasis should be on educating the  girl child and the illiterate woman.

    When a  child is dying and a mother refuses to sign consent for the child to have a unit of blood transfused for reason the church forbids it, and the child goes on to die, there should be an aspect of the child rights act  strong  enough to hold the parents  accountable

    As soon as the bag containing non sterile equipment was opened, Shanice  the  five year old girl mentioned in the first part of this article sensed danger. She was not ill,  and could not have seen any reason why any one would want  to do  anything drastic to make her well. She made to rise but was held down, as could be observed in the accompanying photograph; and so helplessly the little girl, went  through trauma to have  a part of her body cut off and thrown away against her will. Shanice is alive, but a very angry woman; a Prophet  in the Holy Bible stood and faced four hundred men, but when challenged by one angry woman, he fled the city. Details of what went between the parents whose responsibility it was to protect Shanice  could not possibly be known, but usually, these issues are forced down on husbands. Except for  a small number of educated men and women,  it is much easier for a man to break with traditional practices considered harmful, compared with women. The current government  must therefore do all that is humanly possible to ensure that  education for the girl child is placed on the priority list. With the quality  of education  in this country persistently  on the decline, it is time the Federal government  did a review of the current policy on education  to capture the poor who unfortunately are the majority. Let there be free education for all at least up to secondary school level .

    Health education should be given a pride of place by governments at all levels . It is unfortunate that in churches, mosques and other religious places of worship where families congregate, topics on human sexuality are considered taboo. It is my opinion that  these places where individuals are likely to take matters seriously, basic and relevant aspects of  male and female sexuality and where and when necessary sexual health should be discussed.

    Also, Schools and institutions of higher learning should  be allowed to provide information on sexual health ,provided such information is strictly age appropriate and delivered under  the supervision of equally appropriate and relevant authorities.

    Health education must in this matter be made to cover a wide range of subjects including the fact that  female genital cutting in addition to producing a sexually dysfunctional woman

    does the exact opposite of what is generally  intended;  syndrome of ever burning desire .

  • Female  genital  cutting:Cutting away a young woman’s right to personal pride, privacy, pleasure, personality and possibly reproduction

    Female genital cutting:Cutting away a young woman’s right to personal pride, privacy, pleasure, personality and possibly reproduction

    As explained in the first part of this article  published last week,  genital mutilation is a much broader term and may in fact include female genital cutting. In over 80% of cases of genital mutilation, enthusiasts are consenting; wanting to look wild and different.  Female genital cutting  on the other hand, involves cutting and throwing away not only  the clitoris, but in addition, the fleshy hood over it, and the upper parts of the labia minora(the small vaginal lips). In some cases, the whole of the smaller vaginal lips are cut off  in what might be referred to as crude and blind surgery

    Where as the aim in female genital cutting  is to presto a new woman, the reverse is often the case, because it is forced on the child or woman. Besides, more and more people are getting involved in marriages across cultures and what looks alright to one man may be seen and given more sinister interpretations by another , particularly if the  latter comes from a different part of the world. Besides, and for reasons that will be discussed, removing the clitoris does not reduce a woman’s appetite for sex. There is evidence that in some cases, amputation of the clitoris actually puts a woman in a state of permanent arousal. Studies have shown that in some cases, women who had their clitoris removed before  or after puberty exhibit lower threshold for foreplay and have  in any atmosphere where intentions  of sexual nature have been communicated actually demonstrated reduced capacity to delay sexual gratification . The implications of this can be imagined in terms of ability of a  woman  to overcome sexual temptations encountered  as she  goes through the different stages of life.

    Like  in the case of Shanice, the young woman who had her clitoris removed when she was five year old, there is usually the tendency to give the impression that what has to be done must be done to prevent unknown calamities  befalling parents or the girl child, but the whole thing is rooted in falsehood and illiteracy. The girl child compared with a male of the same parent  is particularly vulnerable to harmful traditional practices. This is also more likely the consequence of illiteracy and poverty. In rural communities, the traditional  husband  is more likely to be a polygamous father and  to take issues concerning the health of a son very seriously while leaving the girl child for  the wife and  the older members of the family to watch over. This partly explains why a mother is more useful to her family, community and country if she is educated.  An educated woman is more likely to have fewer children, protect them fiercely,  initiate and sustain a clean break with harmful traditional practices. Female genital cutting the way it is done in many communities in the country is certainly harmful as discussed here under.

    Complications Of Female Genital Cutting

    There are many possible complications of female genital cutting; the ones that are commonly encountered  can be classified into two broad groups; early and late

    Early Complications

    Haemorrhage

    Among the early complications , bleeding and  infection can be particularly dangerous

    As was shown in the photograph, the cutting is done without preparations to control or arrest bleeding . Compared with adults, children do not have the amount of  blood reserve that adults and pregnant women  commonly have in situations of bleeding from wounds. Under the conditions of bleeding from open wounds created during cutting of the clitoris, prepuce and labia minora, the child may go into  hemorrhagic shock and die from there. If she survives that period, damage to certain organs of reproduction as a result of the blood loss will manifest later by way of primary infertility , starting with menstrual problems. This is further complicated by the fact that unlike what is done in Hospitals, no laboratory tests are done to know the level of haemoglobin(Hb) and to know if the child has an underlying bleeding disorder.

    Infections

    As concerns infections, the real danger  is Tetanus, but apart from that, using locally made cutting instruments that are not sterilized places the child at the risk of contracting Hepatitis B and the dreaded HIV/AIDS. Despite  the much talked about ATS(antitetanus serum), only few cases of established tetanus infection survive, and of course, Hepatitis B and HIV/AIDS both have no cure; they can only be treated.

    The clitoris is so intimately related to the urinary tract opening that  infection (ascending) of the urinary tract is almost always associated with female genital cutting. The blind nature of the operation and the poor conditions of hygiene under which it is done increases the likelihood of urinary tract infection, pyelonephritis, nephritis , kidney damage and failure

    When death occurs either from infections or haemorrhage, the truth is hidden, and the victim buried secretly to conceal primary cause of death

    Late Complications

    Chronic pain

    Among the late complications, chronic pain is one common feature. Affected women often find it difficult to describe the pain or where it is coming from. However, many of them complain of pain during sex(dyspareunia) even with husbands who according to them are endowed with phallic organs below average in size. Other women complain of pain during sexual excitation, during sex and even after

    Abnormal sensation

    Other complaints include the following;

    Sensation of something  being present inside the vagina

    Sensation of  the womb coming down or trying to fall out

    Excessive reaction to pain, and crying about pain even, when there is obviously no source of pain

    Inability to hold urine(urinary incontinence) during sex; the bed is flooded with urine during sex or every five or so many minutes, wife interrupts the  coitus to go and void

    Abnormal sensation of sweet tingly, prickly or pins and needles pain

    Inability to achieve orgasm  in addition to a situation of  sexual arousal that refuses to ebb or go down even days after sex, creating tension and the restless pubis syndrome.

    Several medical terms  including  vaginismus, par aesthesia dyspareunia, hyperalgesia, allodynia, etc have been used to describe these abnormal sensations ,which  can be understood from the fact that the clitoris is richly blessed with abundant supply of delicate  nerve fibres that  are better left alone. The clitoris is one of the few organs in the body designed  with double nerve supply ;the pudendal nerve and the perineal branch of the posterior  femoral cutaneous nerve. The organ also contains fibres from the sympathetic and parasympathetic chains of the autonomic nervous system .Recently scientists have been able to map the area of the brain(cerebrum) which receives, registers and  controls activities of the clitoris and have found that the  clitoris, nipple and other parts of the female body share commonalities in many respects.

    Psycho social issues:

    As told  in medical sociology, even in churches; behind closed doors,  how a couple wants to have sex, where, how and for what reasons are purely and truthfully for them to decide. No one , is expected to meddle in the matrimonial affairs of any pair in legitimate relationship.

    Sexual needs and  identity begin early in life . Indeed by the time a child reaches the age of  five(earlier in some and later in others),she will have  passed the initial rungs of the ladder of  psycho sexual development as espoused by Sigmund Freud and will have  begun to appreciate  sexual identity. This identity takes many issues into consideration and will not be discussed here because doing so might not be appropriate for some children who though very young are able to assess information of sensitive nature from the internet.  From this age of five, older or younger  as discussed , any inappropriate physical activity of what ever nature or assault on the genitalia is likely to be written down in her mental diary and will remain there for the rest of her life.  What ever she knows about her self in general and about specific parts of her body will be  recorded,  played and compared several times over  in her brain as she grows and matures, interacting with her environment and exposed to positive and negative reinforcement, depending on many other factors. It  thus becomes a huge problem with far reaching ramifications when  a child is allowed to grow into adulthood  with the knowledge that she is different in one particular part of her body compared with other women.  In most of the situations in Nigeria, where  in accordance with the rules and regulations of a church, intending partners are not allowed to come into any significant degrees of intimacy until union is solemnized, pre marriage counsellors may have issues with partner disclosure status ,with  physical examination presenting matters of their own specific nature.

    Social issues:

    For  women  who have  had the clitoris amputated ,a wide range of dysfunctional sexual responses have been documented.  To begin with, no responsible man would want sex with his wife or partner to assume the form of rape ,and so for legitimate marital or spousal sex, one reason for foreplay is to adequately prepare a woman for reception and avoid vaginal hostility . Conscious of the fact that down below, she is not quite as complete as she should be,  an affected  woman may  want to hide  that part of her body considering  herself inadequate before her husband ; intra psychic conflicts declare themselves, and with  the mind searching for ways to cope with her seeming incompleteness,  response might come  in ways that may be interpreted as primitive, hostile(mind body disconnect), unusual, bizarre or inappropriate. She may even find herself unable to respond at all.

    In any marriage or successful  relationship, a partner finds fulfilment in being desired  and this can be  projected(at least to a large extent)  by way of verbal and non verbal communication. While  in bed, coldness, unusual demands and responses could be easily misunderstood and misinterpreted. It only takes a little miscalculation thereafter for affected couples to start filing papers for divorce sighting what they commonly refer to as irreconcilable differences

  • Privacy in the information age

    Privacy in the information age

    If a law enforcement agency wants to examine your snail mail or the contents of your computer hard drive, it must obtain a search warrant, which means it must convince a judge that there is probable cause that a crime has been committed. But no warrant is required to obtain email or documents you have stored in a computer “cloud” so long as they are 180 days old.

    That would have changed under legislation recently approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee at the behest of its chairman, Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.). If enacted, it would make the 1986 Electronic Communications Privacy Act conform to 21st century understandings of personal privacy. Before the advent of the Internet, it arguably made sense for the law to distinguish between someone’s own records and those that belonged to a third party, such as the telephone company. That distinction has been rendered meaningless by technological advances that allow individuals to receive and retain email and store documents in cyberspace. (The 180-day distinction was based on a flawed analogy between telephone conversations and email; the notion was that email subscribers were primarily concerned about the privacy of contemporaneous communications.)

    In interpreting the 4th Amendment’s ban on unreasonable searches and seizures, the Supreme Court has said that the crucial question is whether someone has a reasonable expectation of privacy. The same standard should guide Congress in adapting federal statutes to a new information age in which Americans rightly regard their email and stored communications as private documents. The amendment approved by the Judiciary Committee does that by requiring a government entity, such as a state or federal law enforcement agency, to secure a warrant before obtaining email and other documents in the possession of an Internet service provider.

    The Judiciary Committee attached the Leahy email amendment to much less consequential legislation allowing subscribers to online movie services to share their viewing history on social media. Unfortunately, the House and Senate approved the movie bill without the email amendment, postponing any final action on email privacy until the next Congress. But the Judiciary Committee’s action was an important first step.

    From the Internet to cellphones to GPS technology to infrared devices that can “see” into a house to indicate whether marijuana is being grown there, technological changes have challenged personal privacy in ways that the law has been slow to recognize. Congress can begin to catch up by approving the Leahy amendment.

    • Los Angeles Times