Tag: Toyin Saraki

  • Toyin Saraki launches campaign to combat maternal, child mortality

    Wife of Senate President, Mrs. Toyin Saraki has launched a campaign to combat maternal and child mortality in Nigeria. 

    Mrs. Saraki, who is also the President, Wellbeing Foundation Africa launched the “What Women Want” campaign in collaboration with White Ribbon Alliance Nigeria WRAN).

    The campaign, which was inaugurated at Dutse Alhaji, Primary HealthCare Centre, Abuja on Wednesday, is a global advocacy to improve quality maternal and reproductive healthcare for women and girls and to sustain health systems.

    Mrs. Toyin Saraki, the President, Wellbeing Foundation, while inaugurating the campaign, said it was high time serious attention was paid to maternal and child mortality in Nigeria.

    Represented by Vice President of the organization, Mrs Amy Oyekunle, she regretted that Nigeria had one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the world.

    She said: “This programme is very important to us because Wellbeing Foundation, as an organisation, is focusing on maternal and child mortality.

    “We are focused on changing the narratives; improving the indicators around maternal mortality.

    “To do this, we have many programmes-one of it is the MAMACARE Antenatal and Postnatal Education Programme.

    “This is one the centres where we carry out this programme; what we do is to train and educate pregnant and nursing mothers on what to do with regards to their pregnancies.

    “We have discovered that maternal mortality is on the increase. But where women have the facility and trained and skilled healthcare workers, there is a change to the indicators-women are better treated, there is lower mortality rate.”

    On his part, National Coordinator of WRAN, Mr Tonte Ibraye, said the campaign was geared toward promoting quality healthcare for women and girls.

    Ibraye said the campaign was aimed at ensuring that women and adolescent girls had access to quality maternal and childcare services.

    He said that the campaign would last for two years, within which the group would share feedback forms from women and girls and the kind of services and healthcare they wanted.

    “We need to know what having access to equitable and dignified care means to them; this campaign is for everybody to join; we want to get feedback on what they want to see in a primary healthcare centre so that when they come again, they will have quality healthcare.

    “We are hoping to launch it everywhere depending on what our resources can carry; we want organisations to sign up to the campaign in whatever state or region they are. At the global level, a lot of partners have indicated interest in joining the campaign,’’ he said.

  • EU prepares Nigerian women for 2019 polls

    Nigerian women possess leadership traits needed to drive the nation into prosperity. But to harness these, they must be given the opportunity, according to the Head of the European Union (EU) Delegation to Nigeria and ECOWAS, Ambassador Ketil Karlsen.

    At a seminar on women’s participation in Nigeria’s political process held in Abuja on March 23, Ambassador Karlsen said it was an irony that the Nigerian women noted for their courage and outspokenness are relegated to the background in the politics of their country.

    The event hosted by the EU to mark this year’s International Women’s Month, brought together eminent female politicians and other politically-conscious women and civil society actors from across the country to discuss the fate of women politics. It had had the theme, “How do Women Win Election in 2019?” Among those in attendance were the wife of the Senate President, Mrs. Toyin Saraki, Senator Binta Garba, who chairs the Senate Committee on Women Affairs, and Mrs. Bisi Fayemi, leading gender activist and wife of Minister of Solid Minerals.

    Welcoming participants to the seminar, Ambassador Karlsen said the idea was to discuss how to get women in the country to be more educated in politics, promote their rights and make sure there are better opportunities for them. . “We are opening the door a little bit. We are reminding ourselves that women’s right is not only for speeches at occasions. It is something that should guide our works and our lives every day of the year.”

    Much as gender imbalance is not a peculiar Nigerian problem, the EU Head of Delegation said the country would be short-changing itself by not making the political more space inclusive to enable women to contribute in shaping its destiny. “The statistics in this particular country makes it very clear: only six female senators, if I’m not mistaken, 15 female members of the House (of Representatives) and five (female) deputy governors in this great country, the biggest country in Africa. We need to ask ourselves whether this is good enough.”

    Relieving her experience in politics, Sen. Garba said her path has been dogged by the same factors that have made the political arena hostile to women with political ambitions. “Culture was against me, religion was against me. Women were used against me,” she said.

    It did not help that she hailed from Adamwa state and was campaigning in a constituency that was predominantly Muslim while she was Christian. But Sen. Garba said she stood her ground. While respecting the institutions and the religious leaders, she said she did what was needful, and those things she did spoke for her when it mattered most: “With those little things I was doing within my community, it was the women that stood their ground and said, even when Binta was nobody, she made some certain inputs towards their livelihood. That was how I became a member of House of Representatives.”

    She also had to deal with hostility of Imams and even church leaders, who questioned why she should contest election in Kaduna. “But, within me, I have this fighting spirit, and I told myself that I must be the voice of those voiceless women, whatever it would cost, I would never, never succumb to any pressure whatsoever.”

    Sen Garba came to the House of Representatives as the youngest of all 360 members in 1999,at barely 28, and she put it down to her persistence, focus, determination and refusal to succumb to intimidation and  frustration n account of her gender.  “It might not be today, but someday, somehow, I know that women in Nigeria will definitely stand up with men.”

    Sen. Garba who has been a federal lawmaker since Nigeria returned to democracy in 1999 said in 2006, former Governor of Adamawa state, Boni Haruna, asked her to contest for the Senate in her home state of Adamawa, and promised to assist her. Sen. Garba has been a senator representing Adamawa North since then.

    She urged women to be firm when they are interested in politics and be close and fair to their constituents. While appealing to all women in the country to vote for their fellow women who show interest in politics, irrespective of their political affiliations, she urged that the “35% Affirmative Action” which seeks the allocation of 35 percent of all political offices to women be enshrined in the nation’s constitution and in political parties’ constitutions.

    Mrs. Saraki expressed delight with the release of the abducted Dapchi girls, and described the loss of five of the girls as unfortunate. “I want to say that those who seek to intimidate our girls and women and prevent them from accessing education or fulfilling their potentials would never succeed in Nigeria,” she said.

    Citing a recent US Agency for International Development’s (USAID) report, she said: “When 10 per cent of girls go to school, a country’s GDP on the average increase by 35 per cent. When women have the same amount of land as men or ownership of land, there is over 10 per cent increase in crop yield.” The wife of the Senate President said allowing women to make good use of their potentials yields good dividends to any nation, adding that they should not be deterred from making needed contributions to nation building through politics. According to her, the UN estimates that gender inequality costs Sub-Saharan Africa an average $95 billion yearly.

    In a keynote presentation, the Senior Programme Manager, Global International Idea’s Programme on Political Participation & Representation (Sweden) Rumbidzai Washika-Nhunda said many women and youths around the world don’t like joining political parties because they see men as being patriarchal. The problem lies within the socialization, political and socio-cultural context,” she said.

    Identifying intra-party democratic processes as one of the key problematic areas, she said the character context and political context have inhibited women from entering into politics to present themselves as candidates for position of power and decision-making.

    “We need to realize that this is a transformative agenda. This is an agenda of redistribution of power and privileges,” she said of the imperative of allowing women in politics. She argued that only a few men would be willing to allow women to be elected into political offices. In as much as men could represent women, she noted, women’s physical bodies are needed in elective offices, and that numbers matter in a democracy.

    According to her, only about half of the countries of the world manage to help a critical minority in parliament, executive or any position of power or decision-making. She listed Sweden as one of the countries that have been fair to women in terms of political inclusiveness. “It’s suicidal for any political party in Sweden not to subscribe to the principle of gender equality and women’s political empowerment.

    She urged Nigeria to take a cue from countries like Rwanda, Bolivia, Mexico, South Africa, Senegal, Namibia, Uganda, Angola and Zimbabwe, which have some forms of legislative quotas. “We need to understand that every gender quotas, like for instance, the provision in Kenya which is also reflected in the electoral law, which is also being reflected in the political parties’ law, cascades in the political processes where the different political actors interact.”

    Washika-Nhunda maintained that when a country adopts legislative gender quotas, they are not doing women favour, stressing that it is a democratic imperative. She said it called for concern for a society to neglect 50 percent of its potentials. She also urged women in Nigeria to mobilize themselves for the 2019 general elections.

    However, Washika-Nhunda yet disabused the minds of people who reason that women alone are capable of electing themselves into power. “The democratic argument that women should vote for one another does not work. If it was applicable, all our parliaments across the world, and in particular in Africa would be having at least people who are aged 35 years and below. Why? The youths in our countries are at least 40 to 50 percent.

    Ms. Ida Hockerfelt of the Sweden Embassy in Nigeria told the gathering that her country was working on making information on women who have and are making impacts around the world available for people to access online, especially on the Wikipedia, the hub for such information, globally. She said such information would spur women across nations to rise and break barriers on their paths to success and seeing themselves as equal to men.

    According to her, only 10 per cent of information on the Wikipedia is for women. She said the efforts would further promote the cause of gender equality and significance of women in global polity.

     

  • Between Toyin Saraki and  Tosin Olukoya

    Between Toyin Saraki and Tosin Olukoya

    Toyin,the founder cum President of Wellbeing Foundation Africa (WBFA) and wife of Senate President,Bukola Saraki shares a striking resemblance with her daughter, Oluwatosin Halima Olukoya, who got married recently.

    Although she is the couple’s first daughter, they look like friends. Blessed with a trim figure which she utilizes optimally in the style department; the mother almost passed for the bride at her daughter’s wedding.

  • Aisha Buhari arrives Katsina to inaugurate maternity clinic

    Aisha Buhari arrives Katsina to inaugurate maternity clinic

    The wife of the President, Mrs Aisha Buhari, on Tuesday arrived Katsina State to inaugurate children and maternity clinic at the General Hospital, Daura.

    The children and maternity clinic was built and equipped by Buhari through her NGO, “Aisha Buhari Foundation’’, which also catered for the health needs of under-privileged families in the country.

    The aircraft conveying the wife of the president and her entourage landed at the Katsina International Airport at about 10 a.m.

    She was accompanied by the wife of the Senate President, Mrs Toyin Saraki, Minister of State for Health, Dr Osagie Ehenire, and the Senior Special Assistant to the President (Administration), Dr Hajo Sani.

    Read also: Aisha Buhari provides free medical services for 3,000 patients in Zamfara

    Others are the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora Matters, Mrs Abike Dabiri-Erewa, the former Deputy Governor of Plateau, Mrs Pauline Tallen, and wife of Benue Governor, Mrs Eunice Ortom, among others.

    The wife of the President was received at the airport by the Katsina State Governor, Alhaji Aminu Masari and some members of the National Assembly led by Senate leader, Sen. Ahmed Lawal.

    During the visit, the wife of the President is expected to inaugurate and hand over the facility to the Katsina State Government as part of her contributions to the health and physical well being of women and children in the state.

    NAN

  • Toyin Saraki sacrifices birthday for daughter’s wedding

    Toyin Saraki sacrifices birthday for daughter’s wedding

    With her husband, Bukola Saraki, as the nation’s number three citizen, Toyin Saraki is not just a Grade A celebrity but one of the grand hostesses of high society. With the corridors of power wide open for her and the rich and famous at her beck and call, whatever party she hosts would no doubt be a high-class affair.

    That, at least, was the popular expectation as she clocked 53 on Wednesday, but the health entrepreneur and human rights advocate had something else up her sleeve. Instead of the blockbuster birthday party expected by many was a social media birthday post where the founder of Wellbeing Africa affirmed her commitment to double her efforts to make life easier for pregnant women and new born babies.

    Those who should know, however, said the low-key birthday celebration was impelled by the upcoming Toyin’s daughter, Tosin, which comes up later in the year. Toyin, daughter of boardroom guru and Lagos prince, Otunba Adekunle Ojora, feels that having a big birthday party could rob her daughter of the spotlight.

  • Saraki’s wife calls for establishment of local vaccine companies in Nigeria

    Mrs Toyin Saraki, wife of the Senate President, has called for the establishment of pharmaceutical companies to produce local vaccines to meet the immunisation needs of Nigerians.

    Saraki made the call on Thursday in Abuja at the award ceremony for creative art and writing competition for secondary school students to mark the 2017 Africa Vaccination Week (AVW).

    She said that 80 per cent of vaccines for immunisation used in Nigeria were donated by foreign partners, adding that the world of charity for charity sake was drying up.

    She said: “the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation (GAVI) is pulling out of aid for immunisation to Nigeria and we have a growing population.

    “So while we are canvassing for the aid to continue, we are also canvassing for home grown investments.

    “We need to start producing our own vaccines and we need to start having local pharmaceutical companies to meet the needs of our citizens

    “I believe with proper strategy plan, Nigeria can stand independently and I hope that day will be in my life time.’’

    Saraki stressed on the need to verify the number of Nigerians who had been prevented from getting ill through immunisation, adding that vaccines protect the people from contacting deadly diseases.

    Describing prevention as investment in good health,’ the wife of the senate president urged Nigerians to ask their neighbour if they had been vaccinated.

    She added that if the answer is negative, they should be shown the centres where they could be vaccinated.

    “Immunisation is largely carried out at the primary care level for free,” she added.

    Dr Chizoba Wonodi, National Convener, Women Advocates for Vaccine Access (WAVA) a Civil Society Organisation (CSO), urged the public and government at all levels to contribute their quota towards increased demand and sustained funding of immunisation programmes.

    She said that the theme for this year AVW is ‘Youth Advocates for Immunisation’.

    “We have organised this creative art and writing competition for secondary school students to raise young people’s awareness of the value of vaccines and the threat to immunisation financing.

    “The youth should be part of the solution; they have a lot of energy, vast network and fresh ideas.

    “Young people can breathe new life to vaccine advocacy by creating and sharing advocacy massages that speaks to their generation,” she said.

    Wonodi also stressed the need for mothers and newborn’s to get vaccinated irrespective of social status and income.

    “As a champion of vaccines and maternal and infant care, I must emphasise the need for mothers and healthcare workers to track, record and give immunisations to mothers and their newborns.’’

    The wife of Bauchi state governor Hajia Hadiza Abubakar and wife of Kebbi state governor Dr Zainab Bagudu also attended the competition.

  • Why I visited EFCC – Melaye

    Why I visited EFCC – Melaye

    The Senator Representing Kogi West Senatorial District in the upper legislative chamber, Dino Melaye, has defended his recent visit to the headquarters of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    The Senator was sighted at the EFCC office during the interrogation of wife of the Senate President, Toyin Saraki, by the anti-graft agency.

    Melaye in a statement entitled: “Stand Up For What You Believe In,” and issued on Friday in Abuja, said he has made sacrifices for the country and had survived assignation attempts.

    He said,” I was arrested 14 times in one year by the administration of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan because I desire a country where my grandchildren (that I may never know) will dwell in and where life is already structured for them. I cannot throw away the sacrifice – when I was beaten and my clothes torn to shred on the floor of the House of Representatives because of my fight against corruption.

    “I have come too far to compromise my stand on corruption and corrupt persons. I make bold here to challenge anybody who will controvert the truth that I have never done any government contract, either at the local government, state or federal levels. It is not criminal to do so, but he who must come to equity must come with clean hands. I have made sacrifices to the extent of escaping assignations. Will my fellow citizens forget all these too quickly on the altar of loyalty to friends, family and loved ones?

    My loyalty to friends is not only when the going is good. I will be there even when the roads are rough. The invitation of Mrs. Toyin Saraki by the EFCC, however, is not a criminal indictment. I will not abandon my friend because of mere EFCC invitation. I also went there as a private investigator and an anti-corruption crusader to find out the extent of culpability of my sister and friend since she was not told the content of the petition against her before her appearance before the EFCC.

    “My definition for friendship is he or she who walks in when others are working out. If my father is invited by the EFCC, I will go there, if a prima face case is established against him, I will shout for his prosecution. So my great people, I have no regret following my friend and sister to the EFCC. If you are my friend, you are my friend. I cannot control what my friends will do, but they remain my friends. I am not fighting corruption out of passion only, but because it is the Godly thing to do.”

     

  • Mrs Buhari, Osinbajo call for women appointment

    Mrs Buhari, Osinbajo call for women appointment

    The wife of the President, Hajiya Aisha Buhari, has appealed to governments at all levels to ensure fair representation of women in appointments.

    She made the appeal on Saturday night when she hosted Nigerian women and youths to an appreciation dinner for their support toward her husband’s victory in the last general election.

    The dinner held at the old Banquet Hall of the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Mrs Buhari expressed concern that the number of elected women in governance had reduced drastically in this new dispensation, saying that National and State Assemblies are the worst hit.

    “This is not fair; we are not asking for equal representation but fair representation in governance.

    “We must all make case for the fair representation of women and other challenges facing them especially the high rate of divorcees in the North and harmful widowhood practices in some part of the South East.

    The wife of the president expressed regret that the rate of divorce among young women is a major setback, stressing that something has to be done to check the trend.

    “Also, the issue of sexual harassment of female students in our tertiary institutions must be checked.” She called for the speedy implementation of the Violence Against Persons Prohibition (VAPP) Act.

    Mrs Buhari also dispelled the rumour that she was kept in the purdah (Islamic seculation) by her husband during the last Presidential campaigns.

    She said it was her personal decision not to come out for campaign because she needed to take care of the home front while her husband was in the field campaigning.

    “It was Asiwaju Bola Tinubu who talked me into it before I decided to join the train. I have never been in purdah since I got married to my husband.

    “My husband is a very gender sensitive man with many daughters. He even allowed me to go to school and to cut the long matter short, he is the pillar of my success.”

    Also speaking, the wife of the Vice President, Mrs Dolapo Osinbajo, thanked the women for their support and urged them to continue to promote national unity.

    “Nigerians are people with strong faith; we as women must wake up and defend its unity. It is time for us to stop fragmenting this country; Nigeria needs something new. A new Nigeria means a new You,” Mrs Osinbajo said.

    Earlier, the APC Women Leader, Hajiya Ramatu Tijjani, said that the party leadership must ensure that they deliver on the change they had promised Nigerians.

    She said the dinner was meant to appreciate those who made the change possible by touring all parts of the country to campaign for the party’s victory.

    Former Rivers state governor, Mr Rotimi Amaechi, who was also the Director-General of the Buhari/Osinbajo Presidential Campaign Organisation, was the Chairman of the occasion.

    Other dignitaries were wife of the President of the Senate, Mrs Toyin Saraki; wife of the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mrs Gimbia Dogara.

    The rest were wife of the National Chairman of the APC, Mrs Victoria Odigie-Oyegun; wives of APC state governors and APC female deputy governors as well as wives of former governors.

    The APC national leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, was represented at the occasion by Sen. Babafemi Ojudu.

  • Toyin Saraki providing succour

    Toyin Saraki providing succour

    Since she quit office as the first lady of Kwara State, Mrs. Toyin Saraki, the Founder/ President of Wellbeing Foundation Africa (WBFA), has been involved in one project or the other. The wife of the new strongman of Kwara politics and chairman of the Senate Committee on Environment, Senator Bukola Saraki, has since 2003 brought several initiatives and interventions to make life better for the people.

    Toyin, international campaigner for maternal, newborn and child health, rights and empowerment, reaffirmed this commitment on her recent visit to the International Confederation of Midwives (ICM) in The Hague, Netherlands where she clamoured for the critical need to provide universal access to a well-educated, well-equipped and regulated midwifery workforce, especially at the grassroots level in developing countries like Nigeria.

    A qualified barrister, she had built a successful private sector career before dedicating the last 21 years to philanthropy.

  • Toyin Saraki’s unforgettable birthday bash

    He build-up to the 50th birthday ceremony of Kwara State’s former First Lady, Toyin Saraki, was full of promises, and the event itself lived up to them. Call it the‎ best of all shindigs if you wish.

    The Former Kwara First Lady was overwhelmed with joy and gratitude as her family and friends rallied round to make her 50th birthday an unforgettable experience. Even the busiest of Nigeria’s billionaires took time out to show their love and solidarity to the woman who is fast becoming the face of humanitarian service.

    The ever busy President of Dangote Group, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, was at the event in company with his buddy billionaire businessman, Femi Otedola.

    Being Dr. Bukola Saraki’s wife also made a telling impact as first class politicians and occupants of top public offices were present. Notable among them were the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Alhaji Aminu Tambuwal, and the Kwara State Governor, Ahmed AbdulFatah, who played the perfect host.

    Toyin had no choice but to acquiesce as her family members and friends broke her tradition of low profile celebrations and treated her to a memorable birthday shindig. One of the high moments of the event was the passionate kiss which Bukola and Toyin exchanged to highlight an undying love that has lasted decades.