As International Women's Day approaches




International Women's Day is celebrated  8th of March annually. It was originally called International Working Women's Day.
In different regions the focus of the celebrations ranges from general celebration of respect, appreciation and love towards women to a celebration for women's economic, political and social achievements. In some countries, this day is celebrated as a public holiday e. g  Burkina faso, China, Uganda, Belarus, Afghanistan, Angola .                                                          
      On this day, men  give the women in their lives – mothers, wives, girlfriends, daughters, colleagues, etc. – flowers and small gifts. In some countries (such as Bulgaria and Romania) it is also observed as an equivalent of Mother's Day, where children also give small presents to their mothers and grandmothers.

 This year's theme is ; A Promise is a Promise: Time for Action to End Violence Against Women.
As this day approaches, I think, we, as a people should ask ourselves how much the plight of the Nigerian woman has changed. Has she has gained the respect and equality she deserves? The topic of women's rights has always been a sore topic in Nigeria. The mentality is that the womaan is inferior to the man and her rights have more or less been striped. There is also a myth that being pro women is being anti- men. Not at all. The statistics for girls/women in Nigeria are appalling.

The Data


•Nigeria ranks 118 of 134 countries in the Gender Equality Index.
 
•Women make up only 21% of the non-agricultural paid labour force.
 
•At every educational level women earn less than their male counterparts and in some
situations men with less education earn more than better educated female peers.
 
•Nigeria has one of the lowest rates of female entrepreneurship in sub-Saharan Africa.
  The majority of women are concentrated in casual, low-skilled, low paid informal
  sector employment.
 
•Only 7.2% of women own the land they farm, which limits their access to credit and
constrains entrepreneurship and business activity. 
 
•Only 15% of women have a bank account.
 
•A gender bias in allocation of tax allowances means that women taxpayers are taxed
disproportionately.
 
•In eight Northern States, over 80% of women are unable to read (compared with
54% for men). In Jigawa State, 94% of women (42% of men) are illiterate.
 
•Nigerian girls who enrol in school leave school earlier than their male counterparts.
 
•More than two thirds of 15–19 year old girls in Northern Nigeria are unable to read a
sentence compared to less than 10% in the South.

Only 4% of females complete secondary school in the Northern zones.
 
•Over half of all women in the North are married by the age of 16 and are expected to
bear a child within the first year of marriage.
 
•94% of 15-24 year olds in Kebbi have no knowledge of contraception.
 
•Girls from poorer families are more likely to marry young and have worse health
outcomes.
 
•Nigeria has 2% of the world’s population but 10% of global maternal deaths.
 
•Each day 144 Nigerian women die in childbirth, which is equivalent to one death
every 10 minutes.
 
•A third of 15-19 year olds in Northern Nigeria have delivered a child without the help
of a health professional, traditional birth attendant or even a friend or relative.
 
•Poorer girls and women are particularly disadvantaged. Only 7% of women in the
poorest quintile deliver in a health facility, compared to 56% in the highest quintile.
 
•Women are politically under represented. Their upper and lower house representation
fell from 7% in 2007 to 6% in the 2011 election (the African average is 19%). Only 7
of 109 Senators and 25 of 360 Representatives are women.
 
•Most 15-24 year old women in Nigeria think it is reasonable for a husband to beat his
wife if she burns the food, refuses sex or goes out without his permission.
 
•Nearly half of unmarried women in parts of Southern Nigeria have experienced
physical violence.


THESE are the statistics. Published by Uk aid and The British Council in 2012. The data was from studies available, bearing in mind that statistics are not readily available in Nigeria. It is safe to assume that these figures are conservative.
The studies that highlight the benefits of empowering women are overwhelming yet we languish in ignorance and oppress our women to the detriment of the society. Something has to happen. A change has to happen  and it starts with everyone. Not just women but men as well. As long as men sit on the side lines, change cannot happen.
In the days leading up to Mar 8th , I will publish articles on topics like family planning, education and  violence. Please join me as I take on these issues. Thank you for reading.

Train 300 rural women on women's rights from global living website


 Links to reference material below;







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