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Worry as pregnant women are denied anti-natal services over blood donation

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Lagos State in south-west Nigeria has succeeded in making blood donation compulsory for husbands as a condition for registering their pregnant wives for anti-natal care at General Hospitals across the state, but indications are that the policy could aggravate the woes of many women of child bearing age.

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Senior Nurse Ade Emmanuel addressing pregnant women and their husbands on blood donation

These are women who have no one to donate for them, because their family members are either medically unfit to donate blood or they just do not want to fill that void for reasons best known to them.

It was gathered that such hapless pregnant women either fall back to private hospitals, traditional birth attendants, prayer houses, or they just stay at home without any care, and waiting what fate holds for them, alive or dead.

Mrs. Obiaju Philips in Ikorodu area of Lagos said she passed through a pregnancy experience she would love to forget because her husband failed to donate blood as required at the hospital in her neighbourhood.

Her words: “I passed through hell but I think God was with me, for I would have been dead many years ago that I wedded. I lost my two first babies, so when I became pregnant for the third issue, the management of the primary health centre that I attended refused to admit me. They said they only admit women carrying their first pregnancy. So they referred me to the General Hospital here in Ikorodu.

“On getting to the hospital, the nurses and midwives incharge said I must bring my husband to donate blood, otherwise I would not be admitted. My husband said his faith did not accept blood donation. No plea on earth made him change his mind. I cried all day and was devastated. No where to run to. So all the dizziness, feet swelling, persistent head ache and other pregnancy challenges, I bore at home without any care.”

Mrs Phillips, who now has four children and has stopped procreation, said when the pregnancy challenges became unbearable, she enrolled for anti-natal at a small private hospital close to her residence at Agar Community in Ikorodu.

However, she noted that her condition was made worse because her babies were usually breached at birth.

“I registered at the private hospital when my pregnancy was already seven months. When I was due for delivery, I didn’t deliver for nearly two weeks of labour. They said my baby was coming out with her legs instead of head. If it was in general hospital, I would have been operated upon easily at a reasonable cost. But since there was no money for CS at the private hospital, we resorted to prayers and God saved me and my baby. I passed through a similar horrible experience in all my four babies because they all came out with the leg,” she concluded.

During trips to the general hospital between February and March this year, many heavily pregnant women were seen in pain because of an apparent inability of their husbands to donate blood.

On February 2, this reporter was at the blood donation section of Ikorodu General Hospital, where about 20 young men had been waiting since 6am for the officials to take samples of their blood for a lab test to ascertain if they were fit to donate.

Only about 20 men out of husbands of up to 500 pregnant women that attended a pre-anti-natal care registration seminar were seen on the day of blood donation.

One of the men said there was nothing wrong about compelling them to donate blood, pointing out that he had previously donated twice for his two children.

“I have donated twice, and this would be my third time. It is the only way the hospital gets blood to feed its blood bank since people are yet to embrace voluntary blood donation. You know during labour women need blood, where would the blood come from if no one is donating blood? So it is a good idea.”

Another man who claimed he was in his early 30s said he would have preferred to buy blood instead of donating.

“This is about the most difficult decisions that I would take as a man. I have no choice because it is a matter of life and death. I lost my first child during delivery at a private hospital. I can’t stand a repeat; that is why I am here.”

After samples of their blood were extracted, the husbands were asked to come back in two hours’ time.

When they returned, it was a moment of mixed feelings as those who passed the test to donate put up smiling faces while the unfit ones wore long faces as they vacated the hospital environment with annoyance.

“I am sad. They said I can’t donate because I have low body weight. I was not the only one. Some were screened out because of insufficient blood and others had diseases which disqualified them,” explained one of the men found unworthy to donate.

Our investigation revealed that some workers of the hospital take advantage of the situation to make brisk business by helping the pregnant women to get someone to donate in place of their husbands, charging them up to N10,000 per person.

We saw as one of the secret blood dealers collected the amount from a desperate pregnant woman whose pregnancy was then in its 16th week.

Bringing out some blue hospital cards, he told the woman: “See these cards, they belong to people in your shoes whose husbands could not donate. So many things can disqualify someone, so don’t be too hard on you. It is a matter of money. If you can pay N15,000, I will help you to get someone to donate for you,” said the young man.

We followed up the lady, and discovered that she was initially rejected by the Primary Health Centre at Ipakodo, Ikorodu which referred her to the General Hospital because, having had a difficult pregnancy in the past, only secondary health institutions are qualified to handle her case.

On February 14th, we came back to the hospital, where those whose husbands donated on February 2nd were to be registered for anti-natal services.

Up to 500 women with various stages of pregnancies were seen.

After a seminar, the Chief Matron who said she had been practicing since 1983, asked all those whose husbands could not donate to leave.

“Whether your husband lives abroad or anywhere, better call him to come back home and donate, or find a family member from 13 years upward to come and donate on your behalf. As you can see, we are only with the cards of successful women. So if your card is still with you, that means you are not admitted. We will only attend to you when we collect your cards indicating your husbands or his relatives have donated.”

Another nurse, Mrs. Ade Emmanuel, addressed the crowd, saying: “Blood donation is very important. Without it we might not be able to register you. So feed your husbands well, encourage them, be there for them so that they will accept to come and donate a pint of blood for us. A particular woman was transfused 12 pints of blood. Others were given different pints. Where do you expect us to get the blood if they dont donate? You may be lucky not to need transfusion, but others are not that fortunate and we would not allow them to die. Your husbands must contribute in saving lives by donating.”

The unfortunate women left with some shedding tears.

One of the women sent home was seven months pregnant.

The woman who had paid N10,000 to a blood dealer was among those sent away.

“She did not even care to hear our side of the story. I thought she would allow us to be coming for anti-natal while our husbands feed themselves well and come another day to try if they are fit to donate.

“But she just didn’t want to listen to any excuse. My husband and I are devastated,” she lamented as tears rolled down her cheeks.

When asked what happened to the one that she paid for the last time, she explained, “He told me he brought two different people to donate for me but were both declared unfit. Where will I find someone to bail me out? My two siblings who I am sure must be fit are in the village.”

We ran into a husband of one of the pregnant women.

The young man named Jude Anang from Cross River State said his refusal to donate was because he was afraid his blood could be used on another woman rather than his wife, among other beliefs.

His words, “What if my wife does not need transfusion, what happens with my blood? Give it to another person? I can’t take that. Besides, we are in a terrible time. Some one could use my blood for ritual.”

We gathered that some men absconded because they were afraid lab test could declare them HIV positive, thus subjecting them to stigmatisation.

The issue of compulsory blood donation by husbands of women who want to use public health institutions at the secondary level of health care remains the concern of many people in Lagos.

A health journalist, Martina Ogbonna, explained, “I support blood donation for husbands. Even if their wives do not need the blood, others will need it. That is the only way to get blood to save women during delivery. Bleeding is the leading cause of death of pregnant women.
“However, I advise that since the hospital authority makes huge money from the sale of the blood, it should be lenient to women whose husbands could not donate for obvious reasons.”

To a medical doctor who wants to remain anonymous, there is need for massive awareness campaign on the need for the masses to embrace voluntary blood donation as it is done in many societies, hoping that it would effectively check the high number of Nigerian women and children who die during pregnancy, mostly because of blood shortage and bleeding.

“What you find in most instances is that we get blood from husbands of patients who had gone to register at the hospitals. They put down a pint of blood so that if there is a need for a woman to require blood in labour it can be used. But I think taking it further to actually reduce the chances of shortages in blood banks, it is important that voluntary blood donation is what should be promoted.”

Director Children Health and Nutrition, Lagos state Ministry of Health, Dr. Folashade Oludara, believes that the issue of blood scarcity would be addressed as the government has embarked on voluntary blood donation drive.

“Government is in blood donation drive. Not that government needs blood but because the people in the state need blood. A lot of people appear at health facilities on emergency cases and when they require blood there is no blood to give. Government does not provide blood. It is when we come out to donate that we see blood to save lives. And blood will not affect the health of anybody in any way contrary to the general belief or myth that when you donate your blood, you have donated your life. That is very untrue.”

By Innocent Onoh

Climate change, biodiversity frameworks now require accelerated implementation

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“Certain kinds of responses to global climate change pose serious risks to biodiversity and ecosystem services, which is why decision -makers need the best-available science when setting policy and allocating resources.”

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The third session of the Plenary of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES)

This was the keynote message on Tuesday, March 7 2017 from Prof. Guy Midgley, an expert on global change biology from the University of Stellenbosch, South Africa, addressing representatives of more than 100 governments at the 5th annual Plenary Session of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) in Bonn, Germany.

“Rapid changes in climate can damage ecosystems and accelerate biodiversity loss,” said Prof. Midgley. “This is one compelling reason to combat global climate change. What is less well understood, however, is how climate efforts with the best intentions – such as limiting the increase in global temperature to 1.5 degrees – might also harm biodiversity if not guided by careful analysis. For example, newly-planted forests may help to curb emissions that contribute to climate change – but this can come at the expense of very rich ecosystems like tropical grasslands, if these are seen as appropriate targets for afforestation. Such systems support unique biodiversity and provide important ecosystem services that are not provided by forests. Similarly, while biofuels may generate fewer emissions than fossil fuels, clearing of natural vegetation to make way for biofuel monocultures can reduce carbon storage and extract a high price in biodiversity and ecosystem services.”

Stressing the point that biodiversity protection and effective action on climate change are not mutually exclusive, Prof. Midgley added: “Protecting biodiversity can make substantial contributions to climate change mitigation and adaptation. Reducing deforestation in tropical regions, for example, is a high priority for protecting biodiversity and can make major contributions to climate mitigation, especially when combined with other efforts to reduce emissions of greenhouse gasses. But such objectives may be in conflict with needs to increase food security. New approaches, such as ecosystem-based approaches to adaptation, could help to reduce such conflicts. The bottom line is that policymakers are required to balance several challenges, and need the best scientific evidence to chart the most sustainable course.”

This need for policy-relevant knowledge saw governments at the 2015 UN Climate Change Conference in Paris request the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to provide a special report in 2018 on the impacts of global warming of 1.5 degrees.

Sir Robert Watson, Chair of IPBES and former Chair of the IPCC, said: “Successful climate action can never be at the expense of biodiversity, because stabilising the climate is only possible over the long-term by ensuring the health and protection of biodiversity and ecosystems. This is why the scope of the four regional and the global IPBES assessments – all currently underway – include the relationships between biodiversity, ecosystem services and climate change.”

Addressing IPBES delegates, the Deputy Executive Secretary of the UN Climate secretariat, Richard Kinley, remarked: “The policy frameworks for action on climate change and biodiversity are largely in place. Now, the overarching priority is accelerated implementation. The interrelation between climate change, biodiversity and human well-being is clear and compelling. Together we can generate extraordinary outcomes towards the safe and sustainable future envisioned in the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.”

In his message to the plenary session, Ashok Sridharan, the Mayor of Bonn and First Vice President of ICLEI Local Governments for Sustainability, said: “The United Nations is shaping a sustainable future in Bonn. When major challenges like climate change, land degradation and biodiversity loss are tackled in a holistic way in just one place, this helps solving conflicting issues and creates synergies. It is a Bonn specialty to pull these strands together. We are doing precisely that with IPBES and will surely continue to do so in November, when Bonn will welcome the 23th Conference of the Parties to the Climate Convention as well.”

The 5th session of the IPBES Plenary will end on Friday, March 10 2017. Attended by more than 600 government, expert and development delegates, it is providing guidance relating to the IPBES work programme, tackling subjects ranging from approaches to indigenous and local knowledge, to potential new IPBES assessments of biodiversity and ecosystem services and the next IPBES work programme for 2019 and beyond.

Korea, UNFCCC to collaborate on climate action transparency exercise

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A new professional training programme on the transparency of climate action and support has been launched.

Korea-UNFCCC
ong-gun Kim, President of Greenhouse Gas Inventory & Research Centre of Korea (GIR) (left) and Patricia Espinosa, Executive Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). The new professional training programme focuses on the transparency of climate action

The programme was launched in Bonn, Germany on Thursday, March 9 2017during a meeting between Yong-gun Kim, President of Greenhouse Gas Inventory & Research Centre of Korea (GIR) and Patricia Espinosa, Executive Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) through a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU).

The programme seeks to provide professional training on greenhouse gas (GHG) inventories to national experts from developing countries. GHG inventories are a key source of information necessary to understand where each country and the global community at large stand in terms of GHG emissions. The initiative will significantly boost the technical capacity of developing countries.

“This partnership is yet another tangible sign that the world is moving forward on the Paris Agreement,” said Ms. Espinosa. “Additionally, the initiative provides a concrete model and platform for South-South cooperation by creating a forum for developing countries to share knowledge and support.”

Policy makers, implementers, and technicians are invited to apply to this training, and can expect to walk away with the theoretical and practical methods needed to take transformative action.

The partnership itself is a part of a broader training programme, called UNFCCC-CASTT, which is being promoted and championed by the UNFCCC secretariat in Bonn. This comprehensive programme looks to facilitate effective and universal participation of countries in the measurement, reporting and verification (MRV) arrangements under the UNFCCC and the transparency framework under the Paris Agreement.

“The GHG training programme was initiated by the GIR in 2011. I hope it will be further developed and expanded through this significant partnership with the UNFCCC secretariat,” said Dr. Yong-gun Kim. “We will actively cooperate with each other to nurture greenhouse gas experts in developing countries for successful implementation of the Paris Agreement.”

GIR will open the training programme enrollment on 27 March, with sessions to commence 26 June.

ERA/FoEN alerts on toxic waste dumped in Delta community

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The Environmental Rights Agenda/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) has raised the alarm on the presence of substances suspected to be toxic waste in Koko community in Warri North Local Government Area, Delta State.

ERA-FoEN
Head of Media and Campaigns at ERA/FoEN, Philip Jakpor (left), and the Executive Director, Dr. Godwin Uyi Ojo, at the press briefing in Lagos

The executive director, Dr. Godwin Uyi Ojo, at a press briefing in Lagos on Wednesday, March 8 2017, asked the Delta State Government and the National Environmental Standard and Regulation Enforcement Agency (NESREA) to immediately set up a commission of inquiry to investigate the development.

The company linked to the dumping of the toxic waste in Koko for over three months now is known as Ebenco Global Link Limited, according to Ojo.

“This is not the first time this is happening. To refresh our memory, persistence ecological onslaught on the people of the Niger Delta being perpetrated by corporations and their Nigerian collaborators continues unabated leading to massive pollution of water bodies and soil contamination,” he said.

He recalled that, in 1988, Italian businessmen, Gianfranco Raffaeli and Renato Pent, of Waste Broker firms, Ecomar and Jelly Wax respectively, signed an illegal agreement with an unsuspecting Nigerian businessman, Sunday Nana, to use his property for the storage of 18,000 drums of hazardous waste for approximately $100 a month.

Italy is believed to produce between 40 and 50 million tonnes of industrial waste and 16 million tonnes of household wastes each year, most of which are exported to developing countries like Nigeria for disposal, ERA noted.

Nana, Dr. Ojo continued, was made to believe that the wastes were residual and allied chemicals relating to the building industry. “By the time the truth came out, it was discovered that the contents included ‘toxic and radioactive’ substances, including asbestos fibre and dioxin.”

Mr. Nana was said to have died while looking after the substances.

The issue, EnviroNews gathered, is being discussed in hushed tones, suggesting conflicts and division in the community as to how to handle the issue.

To address the issue, ERA/FoEN wants NESREA to live up to its responsibility of protecting the environment and enforce compliance with all environmental laws, both in Nigeria as well as international agreements, protocols and treaties on the environment to which Nigeria is signatory.

“Delta State Ministry of Environment and the Federal Ministry of Environment should also step into the situation and collaborate for a proper commission of inquiry to unravel the persistence of toxic waste dumping in Koko.

“Ebenco Global Link should be compelled to clean up its mess in Koko and evacuate its hazardous wastes, including those allegedly surreptitiously buried in large quantities,” ERA/FoEN demanded.

ERA also wants Ebenco to pay specified penalties and fines as well as compensation, to be imposed by NESREA and the Federal Government, to victims/community people whose lands have been contaminated.

Asserting that Koko has become a symbol of poverty and exploitation in Niger Delta and the people have become prey to the “compensation syndrome”, ERA tasked government to protect Koko.

Proposed wood source for Indonesian mill sparks conflict

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A potential wood supplier for one of the world’s largest pulp and paper mills does not have the consent of local communities

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Ratno Budi of Walhi Banka Belitung

A joint investigation report released on Wednesday, March 8 2017 by Indonesian NGOs titled “Local Communities Reject PT. Bangun Rimba Sejahtera, Potential Supplier to APP’s OKI Mill”, details the opposition of local communities to the development of industrial pulpwood plantations on their lands in Banka Belitung, Indonesia.

Asia Pulp and Paper (APP) is considering purchasing wood from these plantations as a fiber source for its controversial new mill PT. OKI Pulp and Paper mill, despite the ongoing conflicts. The OKI Pulp and Paper mill is one of the world’s largest and has been criticised over concerns that its high demand for wood fiber will drive new land conflicts, breaking APP’s social and environmental commitments.

The report shows that Asia Pulp & Paper (APP) is currently considering PT. Bangun Rimba Sejahtera (BRS) as a fiber supplier for its OKI mill, despite BRS being rejected by a majority of the communities living within and adjacent to the BRS plantation concession.

“One hundred thousand people could be negatively affected by these plantations,” said Ratno Budi of Walhi Banka Belitung. “A majority of these communities have declared their objection to the plantation and to the presence of BRS on their community lands.”

Communities have organised demonstrations and written letters and petitions to government officials opposing the BRS plantation, as their customary lands, which will be affected, are the primary source of livelihood for most community members. The report shows that communities were not adequately consulted about the project and did not give their consent to the plantation. It also documents how BRS has included police and army in public meetings, with an intimidating effect on local residents.

“APP has made a commitment that any new concessions or fiber used to supply the OKI mill will respect the rights of affected communities to give or withhold their Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC),” said Aidil Fitri, director of HaKi. “If APP brings BRS on as a supplier it would clearly be breaking its own sustainability policies and its promise to respect human rights.”

“There is a lot of concern that the OKI mill will drive more social conflict, peatland drainage and deforestation,” said Lafcadio Cortesi of Rainforest Action Network. “This is a test case for APP. Pulp and paper customers and investors will be watching whether APP will be true to its word and avoid suppliers like BRS.”

Mixed reactions greet proposed nuclear power plant in A’Ibom

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Members of Ikot Ebon Community in Itu Local Government Area (LGA) of Akwa Ibom State have expressed divergent views over plans by the Federal Government to build a 1200MW nuclear power plant close to their neighbourhood.

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A nuclear power plant in Doel, Belgium. Photo credit:
Julien Warnand / European Press Photo Agency

The news apparently came as a shock to some members of the community who claimed not to be aware of such a proposal when officials of the Environmental Right Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) visited the community recently with local journalists as well as their foreign counterpart from the Finnish Foundation for Media and Development (Vikes) to inform them of the dangers inherent in the project.

Obviously uncertain of the prospects of the proposed development, a youth group member, Aniefiok Anyang, said, “I think I have little knowledge of the nuclear power plant and its danger to communities and necessary measures government should be put in place before such project can come to stay. I think it is a welcome idea, but I did not know there are plans on going to build it in our community.”

Another youth in the community, William Etim, who said he heard it on national news, condemned it noting that, although it’s a welcome development, it however will not be accepted by the people because of the danger involve.

Etim explained that his findings reviewed that the energy plant would be located at 10 km away from the community which he feared could cover the whole community land.

In his words, “I heard it on national news that the Minister of Science and Technology during former President Jonathan’s administration, and I went and did my findings from professionals at the University of Uyo to know the dangers and benefits of the project and found out it will be good because it will provide employment for the populace but the problem is that we Africans don’t have maintenance culture.

“And again the proposed plant will have to be 10 km away from the community; does it mean that the whole community will be taken away for this project? We are practicing a government that does not listen to the people, the next thing they will say will be that they brought development to the community and we rejected it.

“Fine, it is a good development but it is not all development that we should accept because we lack maintenance culture. Speaking on behalf of my community, we are happy that you have come to give us that support and we are ready to cooperate with you.”

On his part, the Secretary to the Council, Okon Akpan, said, “We have not been informed by the government that our community will be the site for the nuclear power plant you just revealed to us. What we are going to do is come together as a community and decide on what to do when we are approached. And we believe that you will come back and enlighten us more on steps to take.”

It will be recalled that the Federal Government last year unfolded plans to engage Rosatom, a Russian firm, to build 1200MW reactors in Itu LGA. The plan received knocks from NGOs and communities across the state.

According to the media, the Nigerian Atomic Energy Commission (NAEC) entered into an agreement with Rosatom to design, construct, operate and commission the nation’s first nuclear facility in 2025 to produce 1200MW of electricity with plan to increase installed capacity to four nuclear plants producing a total capacity of 4, 800MW by 2035.

By Tina Todo, Calabar

IWD 2017: Women’s rights are human rights – Guterres

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UN Secretary General, António Guterres, while celebrating the International Women’s Day (IWD), emphasises that empowering women and girls is the only way to protect their rights and make sure they can realise their full potential

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Antonio Guterres, UN Secretary General

Women’s rights are human rights. But in these troubled times, as our world becomes more unpredictable and chaotic, the rights of women and girls are being reduced, restricted and reversed.

Empowering women and girls is the only way to protect their rights and make sure they can realise their full potential.

Historic imbalances in power relations between men and women, exacerbated by growing inequalities within and between societies and countries, are leading to greater discrimination against women and girls. Around the world, tradition, cultural values and religion are being misused to curtail women’s rights, to entrench sexism and defend misogynistic practices.

Women’s legal rights, which have never been equal to men’s on any continent, are being eroded further. Women’s rights over their own bodies are questioned and undermined. Women are routinely targeted for intimidation and harassment in cyberspace and in real life. In the worst cases, extremists and terrorists build their ideologies around the subjugation of women and girls and single them out for sexual and gender-based violence, forced marriage and virtual enslavement.

Despite some improvements, leadership positions across the board are still held by men, and the economic gender gap is widening, thanks to outdated attitudes and entrenched male chauvinism. We must change this, by empowering women at all levels, enabling their voices to be heard and giving them control over their own lives and over the future of our world.

Denying the rights of women and girls is not only wrong in itself; it has a serious social and economic impact that holds us all back. Gender equality has a transformative effect that is essential to fully functioning communities, societies and economies.

Women’s access to education and health services has benefits for their families and communities that extend to future generations. An extra year in school can add up to 25 per cent to a girl’s future income.

When women participate fully in the labour force, it creates opportunities and generates growth. Closing the gender gap in employment could add $12 trillion to global GDP by 2025. Increasing the proportion of women in public institutions makes them more representative, increases innovation, improves decision-making and benefits whole societies.

Gender equality is central to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the global plan agreed by leaders of all countries to meet the challenges we face. Sustainable Development Goal 5 calls specifically for gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls, and this is central to the achievement of all the 17 SDGs.

I am committed to increasing women’s participation in our peace and security work. Women negotiators increase the chances of sustainable peace, and women peacekeepers decrease the chances of sexual exploitation and abuse.

Within the UN, I am establishing a clear road map with benchmarks to achieve gender parity across the system, so that our Organisation truly represents the people we serve. Previous targets have not been met. Now we must move from ambition to action.

On International Women’s Day, let us all pledge to do everything we can to overcome entrenched prejudice, support engagement and activism, and promote gender equality and women’s empowerment.

IWD 2017: Women must be part of digital revolution – Mlambo-Ngcuka

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UN Women Executive Director, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, on International Women’s Day (IWD), says that if women are to compete successfully for high-paying ‘new collar’ jobs, they need to, among others, be part of the digital revolution

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UN Women Executive Director, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka

Across the world, too many women and girls spend too many hours on household responsibilities – typically more than double the time spent by men and boys. They look after younger siblings, older family members, deal with illness in the family and manage the house. In many cases this unequal division of labour is at the expense of women’s and girls’ learning, of paid work, sports, or engagement in civic or community leadership. This shapes the norms of relative disadvantage and advantage, of where women and men are positioned in the economy, of what they are skilled to do and where they will work.

This is the unchanging world of unrewarded work, a globally familiar scene of withered futures, where girls and their mothers sustain the family with free labour, with lives whose trajectories are very different from the men of the household.

We want to construct a different world of work for women. As they grow up, girls must be exposed to a broad range of careers, and encouraged to make choices that lead beyond the traditional service and care options to jobs in industry, art, public service, modern agriculture and science.

We have to start change at home and in the earliest days of school, so that there are no places in a child’s environment where they learn that girls must be less, have less, and dream smaller than boys.

This will take adjustments in parenting, curricula, educational settings, and channels for everyday stereotypes like TV, advertising and entertainment; it will take determined steps to protect young girls from harmful cultural practices like early marriage, and from all forms of violence.

Women and girls must be ready to be part of the digital revolution. Currently only 18 per cent of undergraduate computer science degrees are held by women. We must see a significant shift in girls all over the world taking STEM subjects, if women are to compete successfully for high-paying ‘new collar’ jobs. Currently just 25 per cent of the digital industries’ workforce are women.

Achieving equality in the workplace will require an expansion of decent work and employment opportunities, involving governments’ targeted efforts to promote women’s participation in economic life, the support of important collectives like trade unions, and the voices of women themselves in framing solutions to overcome current barriers to women’s participation, as examined by the UN Secretary-General’s High-level Panel on Women’s Economic Empowerment. The stakes are high: advancing women’s equality could boost global GDP by $12 trillion by 2025.

It also requires a determined focus on removing the discrimination women face on multiple and intersecting fronts over and above their gender: sexual orientation, disability, older age, and race. Wage inequality follows these: the average gender wage gap is 23 per cent but this rises to 40 per cent for African American women in the United States. In the European Union, elderly women are 37 per cent more likely to live in poverty than elderly men.

In roles where women are already over-represented but poorly paid, and with little or no social protection, we must make those industries work better for women. For example, a robust care economy that responds to the needs of women and gainfully employs them; equal terms and conditions for women’s paid work and unpaid work; and support for women entrepreneurs, including their access to finance and markets. Women in the informal sector also need their contributions to be acknowledged and protected. This calls for enabling macroeconomic policies that contribute to inclusive growth and significantly accelerate progress for the 770 million people living in extreme poverty.

Addressing the injustices will take resolve and flexibility from both public and private sector employers. Incentives will be needed to recruit and retain female workers; like expanded maternity benefits for women that also support their re-entry into work, adoption of the Women’s Empowerment Principles , and direct representation at decision-making levels. Accompanying this, important changes in the provision of benefits for new fathers are needed, along with the cultural shifts that make uptake of paternity and parental leave a viable choice, and thus a real shared benefit for the family.

In this complexity there are simple, big changes that must be made: for men to parent, for women to participate and for girls to be free to grow up equal to boys. Adjustments must happen on all sides if we are to increase the number of people able to engage in decent work, to keep this pool inclusive, and to realize the benefits that will come to all from the equal world envisaged in our Agenda 2030 for Sustainable Development.

IWD 2017: Women must exercise their freedoms – Bokova

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Irina Bokova, Director-General of United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), in a speech to commemorate the 2017 International Women’s Day (IWD), insists that, just as men do, women must exercise their freedoms and be able to make their own choices, control their own bodies and their own lives, and take part in the decisions that set the course of society

Irina-Bokova
Irina Bokova, Director-General of United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO). She says that women must exercise their freedoms

“The story of women’s struggle for equality belongs to no single feminist nor to any one organisation but to the collective efforts of all who care about human rights.”

These words by activist Gloria Steinem testify to the universal nature of the fight for women’s rights and once a year, on 8 March, we restate our commitment to gender equality as a force driving dignity for all. Inequality between men and women penalises societies at all levels of development. The violence, injustice and stereotypes suffered by too many women in their personal or professional lives undermine society as a whole, and deprive of it considerable potential for creativity, strength and confidence in the future.

As the United Nations has adopted the ambitious 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the full empowerment of girls and women is one of humanity’s most powerful levers for development. It is a matter of principle, and a matter of common sense: everybody has a stake in promoting equality between men and women, at all levels of society: in farmland and on the benches of parliamentary assemblies, in company boardrooms and in the streets of our cities.

Rural women are directly responsible for the production of half the world’s food – and it is primarily women who manage and gather natural resources. Ninety per cent of rapes in the world take place precisely when women are on their way to collect water or firewood. Two thirds of illiterate adults in the world are women. One in three women is subject to physical violence in the private sphere, and the wage gap between men and women, for equal work and with equal skills, is a fact across the world.

Women must exercise their freedoms and be able to make their own choices, control their own bodies and their own lives, and take part in the decisions that set the course of society, just as men do. Everywhere, women and men are determined to change things, to denounce discrimination and demand genuine equality, and we must support and accompany them. For UNESCO, the main engine for change rests on education, training, and the possibility given to all girls and women of pursuing careers in research, politics and culture. Equality also lies in ridding the media and collective imagination of prejudice by highlighting the women scientists, artists and politicians who are moving humanity forward in all fields. On the occasion of this 2017 International Women’s Day, I call on all Member States to make a commitment to women’s’ rights, and thereby enhance rights and dignity for all.

Geographers, at Keffi conference, to decorate Usani, Jibril, others

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Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Usani Uguru Usani, as well as the Minister of State for Environment, Ibrahim Usman Jibril, are among five distinguished persons that the Council of the Association of Nigerian Geographers (AGN) will bestow awards on during its 58th Annual Conference scheduled to hold from Sunday, March 12 to Friday, March 17 2017 at the Nasarawa State University, Keffi (NSUK).

Usani-Uguru-Usani
Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Usani Uguru Usani

Others include Professor Muhammad Mainoma, Vice Chancellor, NSUK; Late Dr. Akwa V. Labaris, Pioneer HOD, Department of Geography, NSUK; and Senator Muhammad Bindow Jibrilla, the governor of Adamawa State.

The awardees are being decorated for their contributions and achievements towards nation building, says Professor Nasiru Idris, chair, Central Local Organising Committee of the AGN conference, adding that the event will hold on Wednesday, March 15.

Themed: “Geography, Nation-Building and Environmental Change”, the conference will be declared open on Monday, March 12 2017 by the Minister of Water Resources and Rural Development, Suleiman Adamu, while keynote addresses will be delivered by Mr. Jibril (with a paper titled “Environmental Issues in Nigeria: The Change Agenda and New Narrative”) and Mr. Usani (with a paper titled “Appreciating Change in the Context of Globalisation: A geographic Paradigm”).

Plenary sessions that will ensue will feature presentations by senior geographers including Professor Emeritus E. A. Olofin (with a paper entitled “Reversing Stepping On Environmental Toes To Achieve Sustainable Environmental Change”), Professor Sani Mashi, Director-General, NIMET (with a paper entitled “Making the Best of Meteorological Services for Research and Development in Nigeria”), Professor Haruna Ayuba of NSUK (with a paper entitled “Nasarawa at 20: The way forward”) and Professor Rafee Majid (with a paper titled “Societies, Cultures and Ecotourism: Lesson learned from Malaysia”).

Prof Idrisu further disclosed in a statement made available to EnviroNews on Wednesday, March 8 2017 that there would be a Secondary School Quiz Competition on Monday, March 13, wherein young geographers that will represent Nigeria at the International Geography Olympiad (iGeo) in Serbia, Belgrade in 2017 would be selected.

Prof Idrisu notes: “The conference will provide an avenue for all the Heads of Department of Geography in Nigerian tertiary institutions alongside with the Presidents of all the Nigerian Association of Geography Students. This meeting will also provide a platform for discussion on the gray areas bordering the two parties on either Teaching or Research. The meeting is scheduled for Tuesday, March 14.

“The last programme during the 58th ANG Annual Conference will be the Field Trip/Excursion to areas of geographical interest to complement the theories in paper presentations and the practical aspect into reality.

“Hosting of this conference in Keffi will in many ways touch and transform the local economy of the entire region. It will also go a long way in making the entire state more visible and make it a popular destination for future events due to the large number of participants that we are expecting.”

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