Tag: women

  • Helping women to look good is serious business

    Abimbola Odunusi, a graduate of Microbiology from  Crawford University, Ogun State, is savouring the success of her firm, Sweet N Savy Couture, a Lagos-based fashion label, which targets  women. It was established four  years ago.

    But the dream of establishing her business has been with her since she was young. Then she used to sketch designs.

    Her words: “I have been sketching designs since 2002. I have always loved to draw from imagination.”

    In 2009, after her university education, while waiting for the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), she learnt how to sew. She  started in 2011.

    She later registered the business,which took off with N25,000. Today, she is making waves with her designs.

    Always neatly dressed, she  has given styling a new meaning by designing dresses with a refreshing and the much-needed newness and vision. Her  target audience is middle and upper class women.

    Her pieces reflect creativity and design innovation. Daring, futuristic and all-pervading, Odunusi represents the new Nigerian fashion movement because of the uniqueness of the materials that go into her works and the fusion in creating the piece.

    Each dress has a story behind it that is as beautiful as the dress itself, she said.

    The  markets have been overflowing with clothing made from imported and local fabrics. Independent designers are  working in street markets, festivals and small boutiques to sell various clothes in both native  and western styles. Her  style is deploying a strong sense of aesthetics appreciated by  the middle and upper middle classes. The journey so far has been good.

    She loves the excitement and challenges the startup brings. The icing on the cake is the feeling of fulfillment and satisfaction that she derives from creating something which helps people dress better. The other is her  freedom to implement new ideas. Her ability to brainstorm and fire fight along with her dynamic ideas adds to the joy.

    Her journey from being a new start-up in a very competitive landscape has been a stimulating, yet challenging. The industry is very competitive and there are many designers with established brands.

    As a new label, it is very easy to get lost in the competition, and very difficult to get attention, and to inspire confidence and interest in a new brand. But she feels her brand will get its recognition in time as her ideas are futuristic.

     

     

    She wants to create a directional brand rather than the one that reacts to the demands of the market.

    She believes in encouraging youths to start their own businesses rather than wait to get jobs.

  • Wanted: More women in politics

    Wanted: More women in politics

    A group of women, under the aegis of Women for Equity and Fairness Organisation of Nigeria (WEFON), has evolved what it refers to as ‘godmotherism’ which is its own way of grooming and mentoring young females into politics.

    WEFON, which was founded in 2011 as a non-governmental organisation (NGO) will serve as a platform for women in politics irrespective of their political affiliations.

    The group seeks to increase the number of women who participate in governance and decision-making in Nigeria.

    Its South West Zonal President, Alhaja Nourat Babs-Olorunkemi, who spoke to journalists just after the group’s zonal and state elections, said they have branches in the six South Western states as well as three other geo-political zones of Nigeria. Some of the objectives of WEFON are to serve as unifying platform for women and support for the political ambitions of women.

    She said: “We are here to promote women’s rights agenda, sponsor gender responsive bills in the legislature as well as mentor female youths in politics; since every woman, 18 years and above in politics is a member.”

    She said the agenda for the group’s new administration is to put on the front burner women issues and how the leaders of the group can engage government on appointments for women in the current political dispensation.

    The President of the Lagos State chapter of the organisation, who contested for governorship seat in Lagos State on the platform of Alliance for Democracy (AD), Dr. Abimbola Ajayi-Ojora urged women to begin from home to teach and build their daughters’ confidence in social involvement.

    She called for equity of rights with men in the development and resources of the land.

    “Men should carry us along if they want to succeed; else, they do so at their own detriment. We have no wish to compete with the men; we are only here to complement them to attain greater success,” she said.

  • Women farmers lament inability to get bank loans

    Women farmers have lamented their inability to access bank loans farming.

    They listed like poor road networks and dearth of land as some of the hurdles confronting women in the sector.

    The women farmers said this in Ilorin, the Kwara State capital at capacity building for small holders women farmers organised by Women Advocates Research and Documentation Centre (WARDC), supported by The United States Agency for International Development (USAID).

    Kwara State Coordinator, Country Women Association of Nigeria, Alhaja Bosede Anifowose, said: “Women in agriculture have a lot of challenges. The challenges are lack of good roads, bringing the produce from the farm to the market is a big problem. Another is that some of the women farmers do not have their own land. They rent land. In some cases, they need loans and they are unable to get loan.”

    Anifowose urged President Muhammadu Buhari to recognise women in farming, adding that fertiliser distribution does not get to the grassroots.

    She added: “We expect Buhari to bring some changes. The President should recognise women that are doing farming. We want Federal Government to recognise women in farming because some are doing poultry; fishery and even some are even cultivating crops. So there are some other problems like fertiliser. It does not get to the grassroots; it does not get to the real farmers.”

    The state Coordinator, Ifesuwapo Women Farmers Group, Mrs. Josephine Afolabi said: “We want President Buhari to make it possible for us to have agricultural inputs, fertiliser, seeds and farm machinery.

    “Most of our farmers are core farmers in the villages. They need good roads. They should be made to sell their produce directly to companies or final consumers. We need greater government commitment.”

    Earlier, WARDC’s Director, Dr Abiola Afolabi, said in addressing huge burden of hunger and poverty, the government must recognise the efforts of women in the sector.

    Her words: “It is reported that women small holder farmers constitute between 70 and 80 percent of the agriculture labour force. They produce the bulk of food for domestic consumption and they are the drivers of food processing, marketing and preservation.

    “In spite of these enormous tasks, they have limited access to land, credit facilities, farm inputs, training and advice, technology and health insurance. Women small holders have just 14 percent holding rights on land where they farm.

    “In spite of their strategic roles in food production, government agricultural policies hardly focus on supporting them. It is estimated that if women have had the same access to finance, land, technology, training and advice as men, they could contribute significantly to the achievement of the MDGs of eradicating extreme poverty and hunger.

    “The issues of women small holder farmers cannot be separated from the broader issue of gender inequality and discrimination against women. Women are still voiceless in issues affecting their lives and they are yet to be involved in decisions that affect their livelihoods and survival. In this instance on influencing agricultural policies, there is little or no involvement of women small holder farmers in local, states and national decision making and policy issues.”

  • Abia holds women empowerment meeting

    Abia holds women empowerment meeting

    The Abia State government has kicked off a meeting where women are not only  educated on their rights but expected to educate others.

    It is a forum for self-education as well as educating humanity.

    Speaking with reporters in Umuahia, the state capital, wife of the state Deputy Governor Mrs Vivian Oko-Chukwu, who is the chairman of the committee for this year’s meeting, said the theme is ‘Empower Women and Empower Humanity’.

    Mrs Oko-Chukwu said the conference is used to usher in another fuller meeting across the state and the entire country later in the month.

    At that expanded meeting, the women would deliver lectures.

    She explained that before now people looked down on the August meeting, saying it was scarcely more than a platform for vanity.

    She said people dismissed the meeting as a forum “where women… come to exhibit their new wears and affluence, which is not so, as many things are discussed for the benefit of women”.

    The wife of the deputy governor said that women will be celebrating their own as lectures will be held in the area of education, health, women empowerment, politics and child trafficking, among others.

    She said that it is on that basis that the wife of the governor, Mrs Nkechi Ikpeazu is organising this year’s August meeting to educate women on their rights and things they are expected to do.

    Mrs Oko-Chukwu said that the meeting will be attended by 31 women groups from all parts of the state, while 50 women will be coming from each of the 17 council areas in the state.

    She said that after the lectures,  the women will be expected to go back home and educate their colleagues in the rural areas.

    “This conference is mainly for the the rural women for  their development.

    The wife of the deputy governor said that three lectures will be delivered by Dr (Mrs) Elizabeth Esochaghi, who will lecture on empowering women through education, while Dr Victoria Uwadilachi will talk about diabetes, Grace Ukeje will lecture on women empowerment rights.

    She said that the highlight of the conference will be the award of honours (Nne Abia) to three distinguished women of the state for their contributions to the development of the state.

    They are Dame Eunice Nwankwo, Dr Rose Ekeleme and Prof Okpete Kanu.

     

  • Nigerian community where health insurance costs $1

    Nigerian community where health insurance costs $1

    [dropcap]C[/dropcap]an one dollar fetch a health insurance in Nigeria? Much as this appears impossible, recent developments at Alagbado, a developing community on the outskirts of Lagos State is proving this to be possible.

    Mrs. Victoria Ayinde, a school teacher who lives in Alagbado said she is aware of the National Health Insurance Scheme but the N25, 000( $125)meagre income she receives as salary for teaching in a secondary school in the centre of the town cannot afford the payment of N750 ($3.75) as monthly premium.
    “After deducting house rent and feeding allowance for my children, the rest of the money is gone. My children come down with Malaria frequently but I take them to the government-owned health centre for treatment.

    “Though consultation is free, I still have to pay for the drugs and other things used in their treatment. But with a Community Health Insurance Scheme where I can get subsidy on premiums, I just may try it out and see the difference it will make”, the widow who has three children stated when she was informed of the development.
    The tale of Olajuwon Amusa, a printer who lives in Alagbado shows the change health insurance can make in the lives of people living in rural communities if they have access to one.
    “My father who worked as a transporter for over 25 years in the north lies at home with arthritis. He is 63 now and he cannot walk properly because the pains in his joint won’t allow him. I have spent all my savings on drugs for him and I can no longer bear the cost of the treatment. I can’t take him back to the hospital because I don’t have money. A man comes here to rub an herbal balm on his legs but there hasn’t been any change. I have heard of Health Insurance but I never considered it because I think it is for people who work in big offices”, he submitted.
    Overtime, access to healthcare by rural folks in many Nigerian communities is faced with myriads of challenges which have led to a burden of communicable diseases as well as increase in non-communicable diseases like cancer, heart diseases and other chronic ailments. Already, outbound medical tourism fueled by poor healthcare in the country is pegged at $500 million annually.
    Stakeholders in Nigeria’s health sector have also argued that since prevalent private expenditure pegged at 63 percent is mostly out-of-pocket, there is an active demand for private healthcare in Nigeria.
    As the MDGs closes in and Nigeria joins the rest of the world in agreeing to a new set of sustainable development goals, there is no doubting the fact that a scale up of community health insurance schemes targeted at rural communities can help ensure healthy lives and promote well being for people of all, at all ages.
    With a gateway opened to residents of Alagbado through a Community Health Insurance Scheme (CHIS) initiated by Optimal Healthcare Limited, the people seem set to be on a pathway to healthy living.
    Dr. Femi Olaleye, the Managing Director of Optimal Healthcare Limited, the organisation introducing the CHIS to Alagbado said the scheme will cover general out-patient services, child welfare services, health education classes, diet- nutrition demonstration classes, weight loss/ monitoring classes, preventive health/breast cancer screening and family health services as well as pregnancy issues.
    Launched in June 12, 2015, the scheme is said to be a grassroots approach to drive health care delivery that is affordable and accessible for the people irrespective of their social class. With the payment of a monthly premium of N200 (less than a dollar at the current exchange rate), members of the community would have access to treatment covering a range of primary healthcare services and preventive care at the health facility.
    Dr. Femi Olaleye, a consultant obstetrician and gynecologist who founded Optimal Healthcare Limited in 2013 and Wish for Africa-a UK registered charity organisation is partnering with FBN MicroFinance Bank to deliver the service to the people of the community.
    Olaleye further disclosed that the National Health Insurance Scheme set up by the federal government in 1999 approves a monthly capitation of N750 ( $3.75) per enrolee.
    “The amount appears too high for a typical family of father, mother and four children under the age of 16 years, a reason why there has been low uptake so far.To help individuals and families cross the hurdle of payment of this fee, we are introducing a monthly subsidy of N550 per head. The subsidy shall be provided by a combination of donors and sponsors brought together by a desire for them to fulfill their corporate social responsibility to the community”, he stated.
    Andin a clime where people are not eager to sign up for health insurance, Olaleye is optimistic that the Alagbado model will be established with members of the community driving the project. He expressed confidence that with the support of CSR driven groups, the project would be extended to other high density, low-income areas of the state where health services are needed.
    “Now that Lagos State Government has signed a bill to support this form of healthcare financing as a policy of government, I believe that on the long run with large number of people enrolling, the scheme shall be sustained and the benefits shall be felt and appreciated by all, especially members of the community”, he told The Nation.

  • Comrade and his women

    Comrade and his women


    [dropcap]W[/dropcap]e arrived Abeokuta in the first ink of dusk, at about 5:00pm. We were visiting the city’s most iconic figure, the white-haired, white-bearded, tall, grand fellow of many battles and accolades.

    Before we made the turn to the bush, a sign was unmistakable. Louis Odion, the writer in resting, who sat beside me in the car, read the sign. Roared Louis in a guttural register: “Any trespasser will be shot and eaten.”

    The imprimatur of the poet. All around were trees. We drove on, and a sense of rural splendour fell over me. The serenity of trees. Birds. Leaves in lush colour. Earth Edenic. Modernity alienated. A shadow cast not by twilight but by the peculiar colouring of a forest. It was as though I was on my way to my mother’s home village in Delta State.

    In a few moments, we saw what looked like a clearing. Looking farther, a big house, unpainted but tasteful, with a grandeur one would describe as quaint. Nothing ornate. Not the windows, not the stairwell. It was a house sitting in arboreal paradise.

    The vehicles parked, and in a few moments, the guest of honour, the sprightly Governor of Edo State, Adams Oshiomhole  and his elegant wife, Lara, materialised from a vehicle. We moved in and waiting was chief host, playwright, poet, writer extraordinaire Wole Soyinka. It was billed as a lunch but the vagaries of technology associated with his flight arrangement turned it into a dinner. Former governors, Babatunde Raji Fashola and Rotimi Amaechi, had visited earlier in the day.

    As we sat, I delved into wordplay and described the setting as “Adamic.” The Edo Governor appreciated it and turned to his wife and they exchanged a joke about the Garden of Eden, and the wife quipped that if the Governor was the Adam, then she would be the Eve. At that moment I started to contemplate Adams, just as W.S. served wine and later asked us to the dinner table with his wife Folake.

    I thought here was Adams, and the story of the man in the past few months revolved around women. The first was his wedding. He, a Nigerian, above 60, and the bride young and from Cape Verde. The news generated quite an attention.

    Those who attacked, especially young men, were probably envious it was not them. Those women who condemned the bride, mostly girls, were also envious she was not them. I wonder what W.S. thought about the couple during the bonhomie of conversation over wine and food.

    He, too, wedded Folake, but to less flurry of envious rage, maybe because we did not have Internet or Facebook then. But essentially he was a prophet of his own nuptials with his play, The Lion and the Jewel. I told myself, we had two lions and two jewels at the table.

    Nothing about this irony propped up in the conversation, and so I reined in my mischief. I took my time to watch, speak with and listen to a man I had admired all my life. That was enough peace for me eating his jolof rice, fried plantain and fish with the lubricating grace of red wine.

    But what I also thought of were Oshiomhole’s other women. The one was former so-called coordinating minister of the economy, Okonjo-Iweala and, of course, the big-eyed oil minister Diezani Alison-Madueke. When the Edo Governor started lashing out at the other women, attention swiftly turned from his beauty parlour to the beasts of the economy.

    Adams had noted how the so-called World Bank, Harvard and all the phony accolades of western brilliance of the finance minister gave us nothing but poverty. Ngozi was a failure. She was a disaster. When the Edo governor reeled out her financial iniquities, I felt especially vindicated.

    Very early I was not moved by her resume. She was not trained for the Nigerian economy, just like her bow-tie colleague now roosting like hens in another African agricultural employment. She was trained about the dependency of African economies.

    I know because I attended quite a few of them and I inoculated myself against their paradigms. She did not and that explains why she met a buoyant purse and left a leaky one.

    Then he visited the United States with President Muhammadu Buhari, and when he returned he unleashed a bombshell. One minister stole as much as six billion dollars from our purse.

    How much is that in naira? In my own calculation, it is at least N1.2 trillion. That money will pay all the salaries owed the state workers, build quite a respectable cancer centre in the country. He would not say who the minister is out of decency. But we cannot but know that the finger pointed at the oil minister. She was the only one who could have had that kind of access.

    The American officials cannot say such a grave thing without evidence. Diezani was the worst of the Jonathan era. She was a disgrace of a minister just as Jonathan was a scandal of a president.

    We raked in the most money in that era, we are broke today because of them. Adams had to come out with the facts because he, too, was outraged. It was Adams the activist, the fulminating labour leader that squared off against Iweala and Madueke.

    Was it not in the same era we had other women, like Mama Peace, and Stella Oduah. Mama peace, the first lady, with whom many Nigerians lost patience, spoke as though the nation was a Mammy Market and all Nigerians were subaltern, backwater denizens without culture.

    The evening eventually came to an end after close to four hours of exchange of jokes, ideas, etc. I could not but also note the sheer number of carved masterpieces in W.S. home. I called back his recollections of his search for an African artifact to as far away as Brazil. He wonderfully delineated the adventure in his memoirs, You Must Set Forth At Dawn.

    We left into the bush again, and then back into the urban jungle. But it was a gradual descent into modernity. We saw buildings here and there  interspersed with bushes until it was bricks and tars and cars.

  • Ooni: Ife Women stay indoors over Oro ritual

    Ooni: Ife Women stay indoors over Oro ritual

    Women residents of the ancient town of Ile-Ife remained indoors yesterday as the annual Oro festival entered its second day.

    Although the organizers said on Friday that residents, especially women, should keep off the streets from 7pm, and that it has nothing to do with the speculated death of the Ooni of Ife, Oba Okunade Sijuwade, the women did not want to take chances.

    Oro is a deity worshipped across Yoruba land, which forbids women from going out at night during the period of the festival.

    Some women told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that it was better to be on the safe side by staying indoors during the period than to fall foul of the traditionalists’ warning.

    Mrs Rebecca Olaide, a market woman, said she would remain indoors to avoid any unexpected circumstance.

    Olaide said she had asked her eldest son to help her to manage her business until the festival is over.

    Another woman, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said she had restricted her movement because of the Oro festival.

    She said the Oro festival might not be unconnected with the reported demise of the monarch.

    Another lfe resident who simply identified herself as Sade, said she had decided to remain within her vicinity to avoid any unexpected happening.

    She said “although women were asked not to go out only at night, I decided not go out during the day too until the festival is over.”

    However, palace sources said the Oro was an annual festival in the town to appease the gods to ward off evil and usher in an era of prosperity.

    The source said people in Ile-Ife usually celebrate Oro festival and other traditional festivals like Olojo, Orunmila, Edi, Oranmiyan, Esu, Obatala among others annually.

    He said the celebration of Oro festival had nothing to do with the controversial news about the demise of the Ooni.

    “The Oro festival does not have anything to do with the reported death of the royal father. It is an annual festival in the town which normally holds for seven days and it is taboo for young and old females to go out during the period.

    “During this period, traditionalists will perform necessary rituals that will make the town more peaceful,” he said.

    The source, who maintained that the monarch was still alive, said the closure of markets for businesses and ringing of special bell were the two major significant signs to indicate an Ooni had joined his ancestors.

     

  • Women must aspire for elective positions, says Tinubu

    Women must aspire for elective positions, says Tinubu

    To effectively combat vices that have impeded the nation’s progress, women must play key roles and divest their efforts for Nigeria to achieve greatness.

    Senator representing Lagos Central, Mrs. Oluremi Tinubu, gave this admonition while speaking at the inaugural lecture of the National Union of Lagos Students (NULASS) held at the Faculty of Education of the University of Lagos. She spoke on the theme ‘Students as panacea in the emerging new Nigeria’.

    Tinubu, who said the quest for a better Nigeria would only be achieved if women willingly aspire for elective positions, added that women must be part of the country’s policymakers if bad policies that encouraged vices and corruption must be changed.

    She said: “Power is never served a la carte; you have to fight for it. I have said this during political campaign. I want women to aspire for elective positions, because that is where we can change bad policies. Of all the eight women in the last National Assembly, I am the only one who returned. It is very disheartening and sad.

    “How are we going to stand for women? I don’t think I see that possibility. More women should flood the National Assembly and areas where they can make decisions, so that we can lead this country to the Eldorado we want.”

    Tinubu noted that education remains vital to the growth of the nation, stressing that the country would face a dangerous future if the leaders fail to educate the youth. She said government must invest hugely in education, noting that the past administrations’ efforts were not enough to stabilise the education system.

    The former Lagos First Lady said she was proud of the Lagos students for their foresight and their thought on issues affecting the wellbeing of the nation, adding that students have a key role to play in nation building.

     

  • Women group backs INEC chair’s appointment

    A political group under the auspices of Women in Politics Forum (WIPF), and other non- governmental organizations has hailed President Muhammadu Buhari for appointing Mrs. Amina Bala Zakari as the acting chairperson of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    WIPE urged Buhari to shun all those criticizing him over the appointment of the INEC boss.

    Briefing newsmen on the development, the President of WIPF, Barrister Ebere Ifendu said the position of women in politics forum is that the appointment is in line with the national gender policy and procedure for INEC’s appointment.

    She emphasized that Zakari’s appointment is not a favour as insinuated in various quarters.

    Her words: “This has showed that our president is a gender sensitive leader. The forum also recognizes and appreciates the recent unprecedented appointments by the Governor of Kaduna State Mallam Nasir El Rufai specifically the gender composition of his cabinet. We call upon other state actors to emulate this gender sensitive posture of Mr. President and Governor.

    “However, our attention has been drawn to the persistent criticism of the appointment of the acting chairperson of the Independent National Electoral Commission, (INEC). The position of the women in Politics Forum is that this appointment is in line with the national gender policy and procedure for appointment in INEC. The time has come for Nigeria to recognize that appointment of women in executive and other positions is not a favour as has been muted in some quarters.

    “Mrs. Amina Bala Zakari’s appoint men, is the first appointment into a critical government posts by President Muhammadu Buhari. It is also in the true spirit of his campaign promises to women. The inclusion of women in election administration will augment efforts to increase women’s voices and participation in the electoral process. It is imperative that gender inclusiveness is adopted as a culture and a right in executive appointments. We therefore further urge Mr. President to recommend this distinguished woman to the senate for confirmation.”

  • ‘Women representation in tech industry stands at 7:3 ratio’

    MainOne’s Chief Executive Officer, Funke Opeke, has lamented underrepresentation of women in global technology industry, adding that the current 7:3 ratio, as shown in Global Technology Industry reports, was unacceptable.

    She has therefore stressed the need for concerted efforts to reverse the imbalance.

    MainOne said it is in its efforts to redress the imbalance that it is for the second year, supporting the Women Technology Empowerment Center’s Technology Camp.            The 2015 Technology Camp is a two-week technology education and mentoring programme designed to help girls develop an early interest in computers and other information technology.

    Represented by an official of the firm, Temitope Osunrinde, at a media forum in Lagos, Opeke recalled the 2015 Technovation Challenge World Pitch held at San Francisco in the United States (U.S.) where four Nigerian girls clinched $10,000 after beating finalists from India, U.S., Mexico, Brazil and Indonesia with their mobile application, Discardious, which seeks to tackle the refuse disposal challenge in Nigeria.

    Osunrinde urged stakeholders in the industry to  step up activities to encourage young females to take up technology careers, and also highlighted the opportunities the industry offers women in making meaningful contributions to society through relevant, cutting-edge innovative solutions.

    He further emphasised the MainOne’s support of initiatives aimed at encouraging technology careers for girls including the Global Girls in ICT Day and the W.TEC Technology Camp.

    He said:  “At MainOne, our goal is to provide girls of all ages with support, mentorship and the motivation to pursue ICT-driven careers, eventually becoming active role models themselves to the next generation of girls. Our CEO, Ms. Opeke is an ITU (International Telecommuincations Union) female role model and believes this cycle is necessary to create better opportunities for our girls and revert the gender imbalance in technology.”

    Speaking on the occasion, Executive Director, W.TEC, Oreoluwa Somolu, said the technology camp adopts a variety of strategies that enable female students maximise learning experiences and make them better equipped to pursue careers in technology.