FCT minister seeks compulsory education for girls

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FCT minister Muhammad Bello has advocated free and compulsory quality
secondary education for girls as part of efforts to enhance societal
development.

Bello, represented by the FCT Minister of State, Dr Ramatu Aliyu, made the
statement in Abuja, at a ceremony to mark the 2019 International Day of the
Girl-Child.

He described this year’s theme, “Girl First -Unscripted and Unstoppable”, as
not only timely but apt, adding that education of the girl child was very critical
for the advancement of any nation.

The minister disclosed that the FCT administration had made education of the
girl-child a priority and carried out advocacy campaigns to all parts of the
territory to encourage the enrollment of the girl-child in schools.

According to him, there is little difference in the enrollment figures of boys
and girls in the territory.

He said that girls deserved to be celebrated, considering the important roles
women play in the society as mothers, primary care givers, managers of home
finances and businesses.

He said that the United Nations General Assembly had set aside Oct. 11 to
celebrate and promote girls’ empowerment and the fulfillment of their human
rights.

The minister said that women had often been the difference between success
and failure of homes, organisations and even the national affairs of great and
small nations.

“I have the strong belief that all of us here must have witnessed situations at
one time or another when your mothers, sisters, aunts and even grand-
mothers, often made great personal sacrifices.

“We must have all witnessed situations where mothers made massive
concessions to solve knotty problems which otherwise would have spelt
disaster for all around,” he said.

He, however, regretted that despite the role played by women both at the
home front and national level, women and girls had often been handed the
short end of the stick and placed at a disadvantage in so many ways.

Bello identified cultural factors as responsible for the denial of girls basic
rights such as the right to education, while being forced into early marriage.

“Our girls should be given the opportunities to be creative and innovative; this
is only possible if they are educated.

“The importance of the education of the girl-child has been proven to be
critical to the advancement of any society.

“There is a saying that when you educate a man, you educate an individual,
but when you educate a woman, you educate a nation. This is a solid fact,”
Bello said.

Ms Comfort Lamptey, UN Women Representative for Nigeria and ECOWAS,
affirmed that the UN women would continue to advocate and insist that the
girl-child was not relegated to the back-ground in the development agenda of
any nation.

Lamptey said that active participation of the girl-child in the affairs of any
country could ultimately make the difference between success and failure.

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