Out-of-School Children Seek Access to Quality Education, Empowerment

Some out-of-school girls from FCT, Nassarawa and Niger states on Wednesday appealed to the government and relevant stakeholders to increase access to quality education and empowerment programmes to enable them to achieve their full potential in life.

The children made the call in Abuja, at an event organised to commemorate the 2023 International Day of the Girl Child organised by a not-for-profit organisation, Tabitha Cumi Foundation (TCF) under the NGO’s Flashlight Actions on Girls Safety (FLAGS) project being funded by the UN Trust Fund.

The project was designed to assist 750 marginalised girls in FCT, and the two states on Gender-Based Violence and empower them to function effectively in society.

Kelechi Kugbo, a 17-year-old out-of-school girl, and a beneficiary of FLAGS, appealed to the government at all levels to educate parents on the benefits of girl-child education. “As a girl, we pass through challenges in the aspect of education. Most parents feel they have the right to train the male child instead of the female child.

“This idea of inequality in education has done more harm than good. The government can help by telling parents to take their girl child the way they take the male child. Government should take the education of citizens more seriously, particularly girls in rural communities,” she said.

Miss Amazing Dubem, another beneficiary, also urged the government to invest in increasing access to quality education and put stringent laws in place to ensure that parents send their children to school.

Duben added that the FLAGS projects had impacted her positively, adding that the project equally built her confidence and self-worth.

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Similarly, Mrs Godiya Danjuma, who facilitates the communication between TCF and the marginalised girls in communities, appreciated the organisation for their support.

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Danjuma said that before TCF’s intervention, the challenge was mainly that the girl child was being abused and the survivors could not report or confront anybody because nobody would support them. “But after TCF came to our community and trained us, people are now aware and anytime there is a case, we speak out. We now have confidence and self-esteem.

“We are calling on the government and other stakeholders to continue to support ongoing efforts to end GBV in our society,” she said.

Speaking earlier, Mrs Tayo Erinle, Executive Director, TCF, explained that the day of the girl child was to further highlight the challenges affecting the girl-child, especially out-of-school girls from underserved communities.

“This event was put together to celebrate our girls. They are our treasure and each year we leverage the International Day of the Girl Child to raise our voices for the Nigerian girls. We work with girls in underserved and marginalised communities.

“We feel their plights and do our best to see that we alleviate them, through providing access to education, health, financial empowerment, and leadership training.

“We need to invest in our girls, wherever we find them, to enable them to become leaders tomorrow,” she said.

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