Delta partners UNESCO on women, girl-child empowerment
(Nigeria) Governor Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta State, Tuesday, said his administration would continue to give priority attention to programmes and projects that would empower the girl-child and women.
Okowa stated this when he received the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) Multi-sectoral
Regional Officer, Mr Lamine Sow, and his delegation at Government House, Asaba.
He remarked that the girl-child and women were relevant in
every society and thanked UNESCO for considering Delta as one of the states to
benefit from its women and girls’ development programmes.
He said that the state government would ensure that the
programme was successful in the state.
According to the governor, “Third World countries are always confronted with the challenge of relegating women to the background and I am confident that the move by UNESCO will reverse the ugly trend.”
He said that a lot of programmes
have been initiated by his administration towards empowerment and economic
emancipation of women and the girl-child, coupled with the creation of the Girl
Child Development Office in the state.
He advocated for concerted efforts aimed at giving women and
the girl-child opportunity to realise their potential in the society, stressing
that any investment in the lives of women had the tendency to affect the
society positively.
"Let me thank you for considering Delta as one of the
three states currently involved in the project implementation and it is
important to us because of the huge role women and the girl-child usually play
in the family.
"I am glad that out of 36 states in the country we are
among the three participating and what makes it more imperative for us is that
you actually picked a segment of the society that is more oppressed.
"Although here in Delta, they have not been relegated
but to some extent we have not paid attention to them and to that extent,
anything that will help to ensure that they are better positioned in the
society makes a lot of meaning to us.
"I say this because from all studies done, if you
empower women, we are more likely to truly empower families; we are more likely
to have very stable families and more likely to have a very responsible society
and that, you can't take away from women because of their God-given
talent," he said.
Okowa regretted that the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on the
economy of the nation has put women in more danger.
"With the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the global
economy, there is more challenge for the girl-child because as the economy gets
tougher and the family gets poorer there is the tendency that the women folk
will suffer more.
"This is because the impact is massive on the economy
of the nation which has its general effect on the people, and because it truly
threatens the existence of the family, it is a huge challenge for the women
folk.
"The nations are still troubled, particularly India,
and the Federal Government has already rolled out preventive measures for a
possible third wave which has serious consequences on the family, particularly
families that live on daily income," he stated.
Earlier, Mr Sow had said that they were in the state to seek
stronger commitment with the governor about the agency's empowerment of women
and girls' programme in three pilot states including Delta.
He said that the programme which would be funded by Japanese
government with technical support from UNESCO, would be established in Bauchi,
Gombe and Delta States and lauded Delta government for fulfilling its part of
the partnership.
He said the advocacy part of the project would handle sexual and gender-based violence as well as general marginalization of women.
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