Tag: women

  • Women seek more space in advertising

    Women seek more space in advertising

    Women in Out-of-Home Advertising in Nigeria (WOHAN) has called for an all-inclusive and supportive environment in order to contribute to the industry’s growth.

    Speaking at the inaugural meeting held in Lagos recently, the Coordinator of WOHAN, Adeola Odesanya, said women had all it takes to thrive, lead and shape the direction of Out-of-Home advertising in Nigeria.

    “We would continue on this mandate until all barriers and gender biases are broken and women excel in every aspect of the industry,” she added.

    President Outdoor Advertising Association of Nigeria, (OAAN) Emmanuel Ajufo, said every great thing begins with a small good idea, which is then nurtured into something great. Ajufo said that the umbrella body of outdoor advertising will be better organized if WOHAN is strong. “We should all then support this special group to develop to their full potential,” he noted.

    According to him, “I have no doubt, therefore that this sub-group of our dear association will grow to be a source of pride in our industry. We should all then support this special group to develop to their full potential.”

    The OAAN boss stressed that out of home advertising has come of age in Nigeria, while insisting that women, within OAAN, have always demonstrated competence and leadership whenever called upon to serve.”Women have come a long way in this line of business. While some were born into it, others have worked their way to the top echelon of our industry. Today, we have some female CEOs. At the association’s management level, we have had female council members. Presently, we have two female executive council members and two female BOT members,” he added.

    Read Also: Singer Zinoleesky’s cars, properties owned by Naira Marley, ID Cabasa alleges

    Former President of the Advertising Agencies Association of Nigeria (AAAN) and CEO Ladybird Advertising, Bunmi Oke urged the women to maximize every opportunity and engage in outdoor activities for career growth and personal development. She said that the members would face challenges to prove their competence, adding that they must be confident at all times.

    Speaking on Women in OOH Media: Issues, Challenges, and Prospect, she identified challenges confronting women in out-of-home advertising as managing work-life balance, feelings of isolation, communication issues, distractions, lack of motivation and others. She called for a supportive environment where women help one another, fostering teamwork and creativity.

    Secretary of the Board of Trustees, Charles Chijide, said the inaugural meeting marked the dawn of a new era, with the vision to empower WOHAN and create a more diverse and reputable industry.

    Interestingly, the new association is deliberately designed to fight for more space in the hugely-dominated male sector, encourage more women to seek elective offices in OAAN and promote the mental, physical and emotional well-being of female practitioners.

  • U.S. gives opportunity fo 120 women

    U.S. gives opportunity fo 120 women

    The United States Mission has unveiled the fifth Academy for Women Entrepreneurs (AWE) in Nigeria, in partnership with Ascend Studios. 

    AWE will provide 120 women entrepreneurs with the knowledge, networks, and access needed to launch and scale businesses.

    The participants were selected from 3,000 applicants from all over Nigeria, and have start-up businesses focused on technology, agriculture, or creative industries.

    Unveiled in 2019 by the US Department of State, AWE has assisted over 25,000 women in more than 80 countries over the past four years, including 770 Nigerians.

    Participants acquire entrepreneurial skills and join a strong AWE network that helps boost their companies and create jobs.

    Read Also: Lagos targets 200,000 women for empowerment

    The yearly six-week programme combines facilitated online business courses, via the DreamBuilder platform, developed by Arizona State University’s Thunderbird School of Global Management, with mentoring from established women entrepreneurs.

    At the virtual launch, Chargé d’Affaires David Greene congratulated the women participants and urged them to “take what you learn from this program to grow your business, improve your lives and contribute to the growth of Nigeria”.

    Describing how the AWE programme helped them grow their businesses, expand their networks, and access funding, three AWE alumnae spoke at the virtual event: Adesola Adesakin, CEO Smart Stewards Financial Advisory Limited; Habiba Rabiu, Founder, Arty Makers Nigeria Limited; and Adebiso Odeleye, Chief Executive Officer, Moore Organics.

    AWE Nigeria is implemented in partnership with Ascend Studios, led by Inya Lawal, an alumna of the Fortune-U.S. Department of State Global Women’s Mentoring Partnership Programme.

  • Lagos targets 200,000 women for empowerment

    Lagos targets 200,000 women for empowerment

    Lagos State Ministry of Women Affairs and Poverty Alleviation is set to empower 200,000 women.

    The commissioner, Mrs. Cecilia Dada, spoke after her swearing in.

    According to her, the government empowered about 65,000 in the first four years of the administration.

    Mrs. Dada, who reiterated her readiness to achieve the THEMES+ Agenda of  Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu, said the social welfare aspect of the agenda explained the ministry’s mandate and objectives.

    She added: “As we embark on this new phase, it is essential we reiterate the critical importance of our mission.

    ‘’Our mandate is to uplift and empower the vulnerable, particularly women. We cannot underestimate the impact our work can have on the lives of countless individuals.

    ‘’When we empower a woman, we uplift a community. When we alleviate poverty, we create opportunities for growth and development. Therefore, It is our duty to ensure no one is left behind, and every individual, regardless of gender or economic standing, is given an equal chance to succeed.

    Read Also: Lagos targets 200,000 women for empowerment

    Permanent Secretary, Mrs. Oluyemi Kalesanwo, described the ministry under Dada, as a catalyst for change. “We will empower women, enhance their economy, promote gender equality, and eradicate poverty.  Our goal is to create an inclusive society where every individual has equal opportunities to succeed,” she said.

  • Women threaten nude protest over alleged land grabbing

    Women threaten nude protest over alleged land grabbing

    • Soludo intervenes

    Women from Nimo community, Njikoka Local Government of Anambra State, have threatened to go nude, following alleged land grabbing and high handedness by their monarch, Igwe Max Oliobi.

    As a prelude to their threat, no fewer than 1,000 of them protested at the Government House, Awka, to make their intentions known to Governor Chukwuma Soludo.

    They stormed the place with placards to drive home their point. The women said Soludo should address their challenges.

    Read Also: Lagos West: APC’s Adebule floors Aeroland at Appeal Court

    They said if he failed to do so, they would have no other option but to embark on nude protest against the community leadership.

    The Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Prof. Solo Chukwulobelu, appealed to the women to remain calm.

    He praised them for taking the route of peace, instead of violence, assuring them that the government under Prof. Soludo would address their demands.

  • Don’t relent in giving directions to younger women —First Lady

    Don’t relent in giving directions to younger women —First Lady

    First Lady Oluremi Tinubu has charged women across the country not to relent in giving directions to younger women, lauding their efforts in shaping the society.

    According to a statement issued by her spokesperson, Busola Kukoyi, the First Lady gave the charge when she participated in the 2023 Imo Women August Meeting, held at the Hero Square, Owerri Imo State.

    She emphasised the need to acknowledge the accomplishments of younger women which are undoubtedly inspiring and the fact that the role the elderly women play in shaping society cannot be done away with.

    “At this year’s celebration which has as its theme, Women Supporting Each Other,Making Things Happen, we must take cognizance of the experiences, struggles, and triumphs of our older women which have paved the way for the progress we enjoy today.

    Read Also: Oluremi Tinubu: Portrait of a smart, strategic achiever

    “The support we are advocating is what we have come to present today through the Renewed Hope Initiative’s RHI Social Investment Agenda by celebrating the widows at this event,” she said.

    The First Lady assured of the Federal Government’s commitment to addressing the various challenges confronting the nation, noting that the aim of President Bola Tinubu is to make Nigeria a more prosperous nation that everyone would be proud to belong.

    Senator Oluremi Tinubu used the opportunity of the occasion to canvass for support for Gov Hope Uzodinma’s re-election bid come November 2023.

    She says if he is re-elected, the people of Imo State are in for more transformative governance and a greater lease of life.

    In his remarks at the event, Imo State Governor Hope Uzodinma appreciated all the Imo women with assurances of a greater deal even as he has chosen a female as his running mate in the forthcoming gubernatorial election in the state.

    The wife of the governor, Barr Chioma Uzodinma, thanked the First Lady for doing the women of Imo proud by being the special guest of honor at the annual women August meeting.

    Senator Oluremi Tinubu went on to give support to 500 elderly women and widows with bags of rice, bags of semo, fabrics and N50,000 each.

  • Women warned on dangers of fixing artificial eyelashes

    A medical practitioner, Dr Ayopo Adeyemi, on Sunday warned women against the use of artificial eyelashes, commonly used to enhance beauty, in view of its grievous consequences.

    Adeyemi told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that the health implications of fixing false eyelashes included corneal abrasions or ulcers, damage of the natural eyelashes, eye sensitivity, amongst others.

    She said fixing of artificial eyelashes had become an increasingly popular trend in the fashion world as most ladies, regardless of the health implications, seek perfection and glamour.

    According to her, natural eyelashes had its natural way of preventing dirt, sweat, bacteria and other foreign materials from entering into the eye by trapping and keeping out anything that comes near.

    Adeyemi, a practitioner at Mushin General Hospital, Lagos, said false eyelashes would accommodate the dirt, thereby causing different forms of allergy and infections.

    “The use of harmful chemicals on the eyelashes can cause them to fall out quicker than they naturally would and it is also dangerous when tools to be used come in close proximity to the eye.

    “Artificial eyelashes can cause trauma to the eye either through the glue and other materials used or unprofessional operators; there could be introduction of microbes into the eye causing conjunctivitis of all types.

    “The lashes themselves can cause allergic conjunctivitis trapping and retaining dirt around the eye,” she said.

    Adeyemi advised ladies to minimise the rate at which they fix false eyelashes if they must retain healthy natural ones.(NAN)

  • Ambode, Akande, others advocate social and political inclusion for women

    Lagos State Government and women across the twenty local council areas and thirty-seven local council development areas in the State have joined their counterparts across the world to celebrate this year’s International Women’s Day with a call on policy makers to create more opportunities for women.

    Speaking at the event held at Police College, Ikeja, Lagos, the wife of the State Governor, Mrs. Bolanle Ambode, said that further inclusion will afford women more opportunities to add value to the economy of the State and  the country at large.

    Ambode attributed the positive development in the educational sector to the active involvement of few women at the helms of affairs and the indirect contributions of other women who are encouraging their children to attach value to education.

    She also commended women who have broken through the glass ceiling to influence and inspire others through the feats they have attained in their various professional fields in the corporate and the business world.

    Speaking on the theme of the 2019 International Women’s Day “Balance for Better”, the Commissioner for Women Affairs and Poverty Alleviation in Lagos State, Dr. (Mrs.) Lola Akande said that the theme underscored the need for women to continuously work hard to close the socio-political and economic gap with the male gender for the stability and economic progress of the country.

    A two-time Federal Minister of Trade and Investment and former Chairman, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry, LCCI Dr. (Mrs.) Nike Akande, (CON), applauded women who have against all odds, emerged leaders by selflessly making themselves growth influencers playing extraordinary roles.

    This, according to her has proven that there is a threshold of courage and resilience in the Nigerian woman despite the situation of the country.

     

     

     

  • The Past, Present And Future In African Wrestling Women’s Team

    Wrestling in Africa is a centuries-old sport predominantly associated with men. Some communities also featured traditional women wrestling for courtship, ritual initiation into womanhood and measuring physical attractiveness. However, traditional women’s wrestling doesn’t have a lot of fighters due to lack of encouragement from the relevant quarters.

    African Traditional Wrestling

    In traditional African wrestling, many women faced discrimination for various reasons. For starters, women were seen as physically delicate to participate in wrestling.  Moreover, women were seen as home-bound caregivers, while fighting was mostly left for warriors.

    Besides the societal challenges, lack of freedom and gender parity in sports also made wrestling a man’s world (patriarchy). Conservative religious considerations and cultural heritages also hindered women from participating. In some African communities, women were not even allowed to witness elaborate mystical rites surrounding wrestling.

    In Nigeria, Guinea Bissau, Senegal and other African states, festivals such as King Oussouye and Jola involved women wrestling. These festivals welcome female wrestling heavyweights from various regions as it’s the only place women could participate freely without prejudices.

    READ ALSO: 2019 African Wrestling Championships: Nigeria retains women’s title

    Women Wrestling Teams in Africa

    Today, some African communities have standardized women wrestling, encouraging female participation. For some women, official participation in tournaments and matches is still out of the question, but there are some who are defying the odds to make a name in the sport. As such various African wrestling women teams are gaining popularity in the continent.

    Nigeria is one of the top countries in Africa when it comes to women wrestling. In a soccer-crazed country, Nigerian football betting with Betway would seem more appealing than women wrestling. Nonetheless, the country’s wrestling federation is gaining popularity due to the achievements of players such as Odunayo Adekuoroye. Odunayo took gold medals in the 2014 and 2018 women Commonwealth games.

    Senegal is also standardizing women wrestling, with national team coaches using festivals such as King Oussouye to recruit participants. The national women’s wrestling team also attends the festival to see female wrestlers showing their prowess. It’s during this festival that Isabelle Sambou got recruited after showing strength and promise in wrestling.

    Sambou is a five-time national champion and a nine-time gold medalist in the women’s AWC (African Wrestling Championships). In 2015, the World Wrestling union (WWU) also crowned her the African Wrestler of the Decade. However, Sambou has had to make several sacrifices for her passion.

    The Future Of Women Wrestling In Africa

    Female wrestling is a known sport in various African countries, but it’s not very popular like male sports. Nonetheless, various women wrestlers are striving to advance it despite the obvious challenges they continue to encounter in their quest. As such, we can expect to see more women being recognized as strong combatants as betting companies like Betway continue to embrace the sport.

    In Africa, women’s wrestling is amid a continental change in an excellent subculture led by tough and progressive heroines. There are various exciting changes taking place and fans can only expect the sport to be more thrilling and entertaining than today.

     

     

  • NGO empowers women, seeks end to sexual abuse

    A Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), Exhale Nigeria Imitative, in conjunction with Community Advancement Youth Empowerment Network (CAYEN), has organised a women and girl’s empowerment programme and sexual abuse awareness in the community at Iwaya community in Yaba, Lagos State.

    The event, held at the Redeemers Nursery and Primary School Hall, featured training on baking, shoe making, makeup and gele tying, making of drinks, soap and air freshener making.

    The participants were also trained on financial literacy and business seminars, including how to get business grants, start business with a small capital, as well as save and invest.

    On Saturday, the sexual abuse and awareness campaign held. Participants clad in black top on blue denim met at Iwaya Primary Health Centre Hall. It featured film show- a documentary on rape, seminars, talk on sexual abuse, pledge signing and rally.

    According to the founder, Exhale Nigeria Initiative, Eniola Akinyemi, the empowerment was necessary having realised that a lot of women are idle because they lack the skills and finance to cater for themselves.

    “At the free empowerment, women have been trained to start business with little or no capital. The skills they have learnt is what they can start business in with the resources they use daily and the business can begin in their homes. They will also be able to provide for their homes and they will no longer have time for gossips. The young girls that participated too will be able to assist their parents financially. They will no longer have the time to unnecessarily hang out with boys and the rate of promiscuity will reduce because they have added value to offer and get money rather than offering their body. With this, I hope to achieve a better society,”

    Akinyemi said the campaign was to commemorate the sexual abuse awareness month, let people know it, how to curb the menace, what to do when abused and how to support survivals.

    “Someone abused is already going through psychological trauma, the community must be ready to support anyone that is sexually abused and we want everybody to take a stand against sexual abuse because the act affects not just one person but everybody. We must all support the abuser to get justice and be with them till they are fine.”

    She called for more sensitisation on the act, adding that survivals should be helped. “We all should understand our rights and help others to achieve theirs. Perpetrators should also be well punished and go through psychological counsel to walk them through the process of healing,” she said.

    CAYEN Community Engagement Lead, AderonkeAkinola-Akinwole, said the event was necessary following the rise in unemployment and sexual abuse, especially among women.

    She added: “Women cannot make decisions on their own because they are financially incapacitated. For a woman to be able to take care of herself she has to be financially capable and this can be achieved if she has a skill that can be used to make her money, hence the need for the empowerment. “

    She urged the participants to take the training as an opportunity to learn and invest in themselves. “They are now knowledgeable and equipped and we expect them to start doing something that will yield money for them,” she said.

    She noted that the participants had also being taught how to start small and meet funders.

    The Balogun of Iwaya, Ibrahim Balogun, said the community appreciated the empowerment, describing it as the NGO’s way of giving back to the community that has made them.

    He said the event was good, adding that the participants have a lot to learn. Babafiro of Iwaya, High Chief Gabriel Akinsola, said the participants had a lot to benefit from the programme, noting that the community would now have more entrepreneurs.

     

    “I expect them to use what they have learnt to better their own lives like starting up business and being able to fend for themselves and their family,” he said.

    One of the participants, AwoniyiOpeyemi, said she came for the training to enable her to become self-employed.

    “I learnt how to bake, I intend to be able to bake on my own, sell and make money for myself. This is not the first time the ngo will empower women and girls. About four years ago, I learnt how to make beads and I still make it and make money from it.”

    She thanked the ngo for the free training which has enabled her meet her financial needs at age 14,” she said.

    From fifth right (standing on black top): CAYEN Community Engagement Lead, Aderonke Akinola-Akinwole;  Founder, Exhale Nigeria Initiative, Eniola Akinyemi;  The Balogun of Iwaya, Ibrahim Balogun and Babafiro of Iwaya, High Chief Gabriel Akinsola, at the event.

  • Case for more inclusiveness for Nigerian women in governance

    THE 2019 election has come and almost gone as the battles have shifted to the legal front. But a look at the race has shown that women are significantly few in the number of candidates and winners in the election. Except for a few of them that were elected into legislative houses, there were little gains for the women folks in the Nigerian political system.

    Truth be told, the two major political parties in the country – All Progressives Congress (APC) and the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) – claim to love the womenfolk dearly. They wax lyrical tunes and political messages to show their interest in advancing the political interest of women in the country, but unfortunately, this is where it ends.

    In the last general election, no woman was nominated governorship candidate of both parties and none was elected. Instead, the best they did was to nominate a few of them as deputy governorship candidates – and like deputy governors all over the country, they do not have any political influence, and their relevance is negligible.

    According to statistics, women and youth make up almost 80 percent of eligible voters in the country; yet, they have been ignored politically, except during elections when their votes count.

    During the 2015 election circle, due to pressure put up by women’s right organisations who used Dame Patience Jonathan as their anchor person, the government of President Goodluck Jonathan, realising it needed the women’s votes, proposed to reserve 35% of all appointive positions for women and youth. This has somewhat become the official policy of the two parties.

    Early last year, President Muhammadu Buhari signed into law, the Not too Young to Rule policy which significantly reduced the age that people need to attain before vying for some positions, and also giving greater opportunities and inclusion for women and youth. This was done to curry the votes of the women and youth.

    But has this come to any advantage? The outcome of the 2019 general election has proved the contrary.

    No doubt, politically, the Nigerian woman has made political progress. From the days of the Aba women riot to Mrs. Olufunmilayo Ransome-Kuti to Mrs. Margaret Ekpo to Hajia Sambo Sawaba, there has been gradual inclusion of women in the political system.

    Not surprisingly also, along with their children they make up the bulk of victims of political violence in the country. Despite these, they are hardly compensated with positions in government commensurate with their qualification apart from being given such politically irrelevant posts.

    But in the last few years, some of them have however taken on such sensitive positions like the Ministry of Finance and Education where they have performed creditably well. However this is significantly low.

    In numbers, in the current political system, women’s representation in the House of Representatives is 5.5%; In the Senate: 5.8%. Only 5 out of 73 candidates that ran for President in 2019 are women. 1668 men and 232 women vied for 109 senatorial seats while 4,139 men and 560 women competed for 360 seats in the House of Representatives.

    Mrs. Pauline Tallen, a former minister and the first woman to be nominated a deputy governor under the 4th Republic, said at a capacity building workshop for budding women politicians, “I advise [young] women to believe in themselves. Be prepared because it’s not easy.”

    Not easy indeed. Three decades have passed since Tallen joined politics, but the state of women’s political participation in Nigeria remains abysmally low, with less than 6 per cent women in the parliament. Today, Nigeria has one of the lowest rates of female representation in parliament across Africa, and globally, it ranks 181st out of 193 countries, according to the International Parliamentary Union.

    “We have a whole lot of women across Nigeria who can do so much better than what we are offered now,” explains Joy Ada Onyesoh, National Coordinator of Nigeria’s Women Situation Room and Country Director for the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF). “The issue is that we are not given the opportunity…”

    Since 2006, Nigeria’s National Gender Policy highlights women’s right to equality in economic, social and political life, with provisions to increase women in elected and appointed positions to 35 per centbut that hasn’t happened.

    “There have been so many protocols, conventions, amendments of the Nigerian Constitution, which support providing a quota system, but in reality, women are excluded in politics,” says Blessing Obidiegwu, Head of the Gender Division for the Independent National Electoral Commission.

    In 2016, a Gender and Equal Opportunities Bill was tabled, calling for the adoption of Temporary Special Measures to eliminate discrimination in political and public life. UN Women supported the Bill’s passage in five states (Anambra, Ekiti, Imo, Kogi and Plateau) and is currently advocating, alongside partners, for its adoption at the National Assembly.

    Although Mrs. Oby Ezekwesili was just one of the six females among the 73 presidential candidates, before she withdrew her candidacy, her role was significant insofar as she was a direct repudiation of the gendered narratives that portray women candidates as incompetent and unable to compete in the world of politics.

    While women make up 47 percent of registered voters for the 2019 elections, only eight percent were cleared to vie for electoral positions in the presidential elections.

    In the federal elections Presidency, Senate and House of Representatives women’s candidature was unimpressive. For the presidential elections, men swamp women by a 12:1 ratio. Women’s presidential candidature stood at eight per cent.

    At the National Assembly, women’s candidature was only 12 percent of the total seats available, given that a total of 763 women vied for seats for the Senate and House of Representatives out of 6,563 places available.

    Women’s minimal participation in Nigeria has multi-dimensional implications for the democratic project in Nigeria and for the continuing quest for gender equality in Africa’s biggest economy.

    The role of First Ladies in political inclusion in the country

    The first of the wife of Nigerian to play significant roles in advancing the course of women was Mrs. Maryam Babangida. With her Better Life for Women programme, she significantly brought to the fore, the woman’s cause. This was followed by Mrs. Maryam Abacha, Mrs. Stella Obasanjo and Mrs. Patience Jonathan each in their individual ways.

    In the present dispensation, the Wife of the President, Dr. Mrs. Aisha Buhari, has been very outspoken in her resolve for political inclusiveness for women. Earlier, she openly said to her husband and the political leadership that she would not mobilise the women for him if there are no political changes in the system.

    During the 2019 election she and the wife of the Vice President, Mrs. Dolapo Osinbajo, introduced and ran the Women and Youth Presidential Campaign for the APC. The success of this was clear through the door-to-door campaign members embarked upon across the country. This is an indelible new introduction into the political lexicon of Nigeria.

    Before the elections, President Muhammadu Buhari has repeatedly announced that he will engage more women when he wins his second term. We wait to see whether he will follow his words with action now that he has won his second term.

    Progress

    Liberia’s former Head of State, Ellen Johnson Sir-leaf, has made history as Africa’s first female President. In the United States, Senator Hillary Clinton has made a positive impact in America’s politics. Also the Republican Party’s presidential candidate, John McCain, picked a woman – Sarah Palin, the Governor of Alaska, as his running mate for the U.S election. This could be seen as the strong factor women constitute in the political parlance of any nation.

    Today, many countries of the world are making efforts to bridge the gap between men and women in politics. But in Nigeria, the representation of women in government, though it has improved, is still very low compared to what obtains in other nations of the world, particularly in the developed nations. As it were, the number of serving female ministers is still very few.

    A greater inclusion of women in the parties’ permutations in order to win future elections has become a reality. Whereas the exclusion of the women folks has been maintained by successive governments without repercussions, just as it happened in the last elections, the implication of neglecting women may prove costly in 2023.

    There is no doubt that women have some potentials and rights to contribute meaningfully to the development of their country. Therefore, the Nigerian government should work towards achieving gender equality in democratic governance, increase women participation and access to politics. It must be realised that the role of women as home makers cannot be down played in that it equally has an extended impact on their responsibility in service, the feminine touch  they say, cannot be wished away.

     

    -Ayomo is a rights advocate and media consultant.