Tag: UNICEF

  • UNICEF, WHO charge governments to step up resources to support breastfeeding

    UNICEF, WHO charge governments to step up resources to support breastfeeding

    … Says 70% of infants in Nigeria are denied the benefits of breastfeeding
    in their formative years

    By Joyce Remi-Babayeju

    As countries mark the 2022 World Breastfeeding Week, BFW, UNICEF and WHO have called governments, donors, Civil Societies, CSOs and the private sector to step up allocation for increased resources to support breastfeeding policies and programmes especially for indigent families living in emergency settings.

    UNICEF and WHO made this call today in a joint statement to mark the BF Week in Nigeria.

    The duo global agencies also lament that ubiquitous global crises continue to threaten the health and nutrition of millions of babies and children, the vital importance of breastfeeding as the best possible start in life is more critical than ever.

    “World Breastfeeding Week, under its theme Step up for breastfeeding: Educate and Support, UNICEF and WHO are calling on governments to allocate increased resources to protect, promote, and support breastfeeding policies and programmes, especially for the most vulnerable families living in emergency settings.” 

    Also in Nigeria, 70% of infants in Nigeria are denied the benefits of breast milk in their formative years as only 29% of children are breast fed.
    The statement read,” Only 9% of organizations have a workplace breastfeeding policy, indicating that mothers lack the enabling environment to optimally breastfeed their babies. The results are high stunting rates of 37% of children Under- 5, of which 21% are severe, and wasting among children under 5 years of age (7%). This continues to present severe consequences for the child.

    “Breastfeeding also acts as a baby’s first vaccine, protecting them from common childhood illnesses.

    “Yet the emotional distress, physical exhaustion, lack of space and privacy, and poor sanitation experienced by mothers in emergency settings mean that many babies are missing out on the benefits of breastfeeding to help them survive.

    “During emergencies, including those in Afghanistan, Yemen, Ukraine, the Horn of Africa, and the Sahel, breastfeeding guarantees a safe, nutritious and accessible food source for babies and young children. It offers a powerful line of defense against disease and all forms of child malnutrition, including wasting.

    “Breastfeeding also acts as a baby’s first vaccine, protecting them from common childhood illnesses.

    “Yet the emotional distress, physical exhaustion, lack of space and privacy, and poor sanitation experienced by mothers in emergency settings mean that many babies are missing out on the benefits of breastfeeding to help them survive.

    “Fewer than half of all newborn babies are breastfed in the first hour of life, leaving them more vulnerable to disease and death. And only 44 per cent of infants are exclusively breastfed in the first six months of life, short of the World Health Assembly target of 50 per cent by 2025.

    “Protecting, promoting, and supporting breastfeeding is more important than ever, not just for protecting our planet as the ultimate natural, sustainable, first food system, but also for the survival, growth, and development of millions of infants.”

    UNICEF and WHO are reiterate their call on governments, donors, civil society, and the private sector to step up efforts to Prioritize investing in breastfeeding support policies and programmes, especially in fragile and food insecure contexts.

    Equip health and nutrition workers in facilities and communities with the skills they need to provide quality counselling and practical support to mothers to successfully breastfeed.

    Protect caregivers and health care workers from the unethical marketing influence of the formula industry by fully adopting and implementing the International Code of Marketing of Breast Milk Substitutes, including in humanitarian settings.

    Implement family-friendly policies that provide mothers with the time, space, and support they need to breastfeed.”

  • UNICEF to manage $2.7m SIDA funds to Support Pregnant women, U5 children with nutrition, water in N/E

    UNICEF to manage $2.7m SIDA funds to Support Pregnant women, U5 children with nutrition, water in N/E

    By Joyce Remi-Babayeju

    The United Nations Children Fund, UNICEF, is set to implement the new $2.7 million Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency , SIDA, fund to support at least 280,000 pregnant women , lactating mothers and under five children in the North East region of Nigeria.
    In a press release made a available to newsmen, the SIDA fund is would support this segment of the North East population with maternal nutrition counselling and acute malnutrition management services.
    According to UNICEF, the new funding of SEK 26 million (US$ 2.7 million), to be implemented jointly by partners will also help improve access to safe water, sanitation systems and hygiene for 86,000 conflict-affected women and children in north-east Nigeria.

    Provision of the new SIDA fund is to help cushion the effects the thirteen years of armed conflict and humanitarian situation in the North East which has left women and children in acute vulnerability.
    The global children agency noted that congestion in camps and settlements, high rates of open defecation and poor sanitation practices have put conflict-affected families and children at the risk of disease outbreaks and preventable deaths.

    ” Insecurity, loss of livelihood opportunities, high food prices and COVID-19 combined have put 4.1 million people in need of food assistance, drastically impacting the food and nutrition quality available for children in the region.”

    North-east Nigeria is currently experiencing its highest burden of acute malnutrition since 2016, with 34 per cent projected increase in the burden of acute malnutrition in the lean season of 2022, compared to 2021. Unless urgent actions are taken, at least 1.7 million under five children in north-east Nigeria will need acute malnutrition treatment in 2022, UNICEF said.

    Meanwhile the UNICEF Representative in Nigeria, Peter Hawkins said, ” Malnutrition, the single most deadly threat to child survival and development is dealing children in North-East Nigeria.”

    “Insecurity, global hike in food prices and ongoing humanitarian interventions targeting early detection at the household level are resulting in a record number of under five children presenting symptoms of acute malnutrition and needing urgent life-saving services.”

    Furthermore Hawkins said, “UNICEF is grateful that the support from SIDA will not only help to scale treatment services to more children and address contributory water and sanitation services issues in camps and settlements, but will also help increase investment in preventive nutrition services targeting pregnant women and lactating mothers with maternal nutrition services,’’ said Peter Hawkins.

  • German Govt, WFP, UNICEF jointly launch €40m humanitarian support for 500,000 people in Borno , Yobe States

    German Govt, WFP, UNICEF jointly launch €40m humanitarian support for 500,000 people in Borno , Yobe States

    By Joyce Remi-Babayeju

    The German Government , WPF , UNICEF have jointly launched a resilience and essential support humanitarian services for over 500,000 people affected in conflict in the North East region of Nigeria.

    Accordingly the new humanitarian and development package which is a three year programme is aimed at enhancing peace, increasing livelihood opportunities such as providing education, health, nutrition, child protection, and sanitation support to strengthen the resilience of vulnerable populations in Borno and Yobe States.

    The package which is funded by the German Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development through German Development Bank, KfW, children 0-23 months, pregnant women, school-age children, adolescent girls, female-headed households, and people with disability will be targeted under the Resilience and Social Cohesion project is to be implemented for three years by the World Food Programme (WFP) and UNICEF.

    The multi-year project will leverage ongoing humanitarian support in Bade Local Government Area (LGA) of Yobe State and Shani LGA of Borno State, while also providing multisectoral interventions to address drivers of conflict and fragility.

    Basically the project will support the strengthening of local governance structures to promote social cohesion through community-based processes and the capacity building of Government partners.

    According to UNICEF statement, the armed conflict which is in its thirteenth year in north-east Nigeria has devastated and levelled communities has destroyed livelihoods, and disrupted essential services for children and adults. Protracted insecurity, high food prices and COVID-19 lockdowns have put more than 4 million people in need of food assistance.

    The situation is further exacerbated by a severe impact of violence and unrest on family income, mental health, nutrition, education and other child protection concerns. Across the region, 1.14 million children are acutely malnourished at a scale not seen since 2018.

    The UNICEF Representative to Nigeria, Peter Hawkins said, “This is a pathway to peace and sustainable development.” ““Children and other vulnerable groups will have a lifeline, and an opportunity to survive and thrive in communities where livelihood and peace building activities are present. ”

    “Conflict in any region is potential instability in the rest of the world. UNICEF is grateful to the German Government for supporting pathways to child survival and peace in north-east Nigeria”, Hawkins said.

    The Resilience and Social Cohesion programme will focus and contribute to seven Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of poverty eradication, zero hunger, access to quality education, gender equality, good health and wellbeing, climate action, peace, justice and strong institutions as well as partnership for goals.

    The new programme which will focus on peace building, governance capacity strengthening, sustainable livelihood creation, restoration of infrastructures, and provision of life-saving services to 156,888 direct beneficiaries and 362,307 indirect beneficiaries in both LGAs.

    Deputy Country Director and Officer in Charge of World Food Programme, WFP, in Nigeria, Ma Simone Parchment said ,“WFP welcomes this timely and generous support from the Government and people of Germany. This project will support people and communities facing the peril of conflict and hunger in northeast Nigeria, especially in Borno and Yobe states”.

    Parchment noted,“In these affected states, persistent conflict, climate shocks, high food prices and reduced household purchasing power undermine people’s ability to feed themselves and sustain their livelihoods. This contribution from the Government of Germany will go a long way in building resilience, social cohesion and peace in the affected communities. ”

  • UNICEF commends Rescue of 50 abducted Children in Ondo

    UNICEF commends Rescue of 50 abducted Children in Ondo

    By Joyce Remi-Babayeju

    United Nations Children’s Fund, (UNICEF) recently has commended the rescue of over 50 children abducted and held against their will in Ondo State.

    UNICEF Nigeria representative, Peter Hawkins in a press statement released in Abuja, yesterday stated this.

    The children were allegedly been held by a church at its premises in Ondo town, Ondo State where the Police found and rescued them.

    Hawkins has enjoined governments at all levels to redouble efforts to protect children against all forms of violence while condemning all targets of violence against children in whatever guise.

    The UNICEF Chieftain said, “Children should not be targets of violence in whatever guise. Violence against children is condemnable and we call on governments to redouble efforts to protect children against all forms of violence. A society’s health is measured by how it treats its children. “

  • UNICEF Provides 1995 Hijabs To 133 EAC Schools In Sokoto

    UNICEF Provides 1995 Hijabs To 133 EAC Schools In Sokoto

    By Muhammad Ibrahim, Sokoto

    The Permanent Secretary State Universal Basic Education Board Alhaji Ahmad Rufa’i Ibrahim has today inspected materials provided by UNICEF for distribution to Environmental Health Clubs across the three EAC schools in the state.

    The benefiting 133 schools are from Kware, Shagari and Isa LGEAs.

    The materials included 931 sets of T-shirts and 1995 hijabs.

    Speaking shortly after inspecting the materials, the Permanent Secretary Alhaji Ahmed Rufa’i Ibrahim expressed appreciation to UNICEF for its continued support to basic education in the state.

    According to him, the materials would no doubt motivate members of the Environmental Health Clubs to develop more interest in issues concerning the Environmental Health in the selected Schools.

    He was accompanied on the visit by the Directors of Administration Alhaji Mubarak A Waziri,ECCDA Farouk Katine as well as some Deputy Directors.

  • UNICEF launches cash transfer incentives for school enrollment for over 20,000 out of school children in Katsina

    UNICEF launches cash transfer incentives for school enrollment for over 20,000 out of school children in Katsina

    News
    By Joyce Remi-Babayeju

    As a way of encouraging learning , the United Nations Children Fund, UNICEF, and the Katsina State Government today launched a cash transfer programme to
    encourage increase school enrollment for over 20,000 Out-of-School children in Katsina.

    According to UNICEF, the cash transfer programme will provide access to learning for the beneficiaries and help reduce the number of 536,132 children currently out of school in Katsina State.

    Also the cash transfer would help to improve the socio economic benefits if the children and their families.

    Speaking at the launch of the programme in Mani the Governor of Katsina State, Aminu Bello Maisari said,“The partnership between Katsina State Government and UNICEF has yielded many positive results, not just in the education sector, but in other sectors of the state.”

    An elated Maisari said,”We are grateful to UNICEF and the Educate A Child (EAC) project for the funds. The Programme Implementation Unit for the cash transfer programme will monitor the programme closely and ensure that the beneficiaries make judicious use of the resources. ”

    Through the cash transfer programme, a total of ₦332,832,000 will be disbursed to 20,802 out-of-school children (OOSC) and Almajiris in Kafur, Mani and Safana LGAs of Katsina State. The funds will be disbursed through 10,557 female parents/caregivers to increase school enrolment and attendance rates for boys and girls.

    Each female parent/caregiver will receive N8,000 per tranche twice in 2022, amounting to N16,000.per beneficiary.

    The cash transfer programme will also ensure that beneficiaries are enrolled and retained in any form of organized school, including Integrated Qur’anic Schools (IQS) and provided with literacy and numeracy skills linked to employability and livelihood schemes.

    “We are thankful to our partners, the Educate A Child Project, for funds for the cash transfer programme in Katsina State. The take-off of the cash transfer programme provides the opportunity to take children off the streets back to the classrooms where every school age child should be.”
    UNICEF Representative in Nigeria, Peter Hawkins urged the Katsina State Government to continue to build on these interventions to ensure that every school age child is in school and learning.

    Hawkins said, “UNICEF is excited that with this launch, we’ll be addressing the importpant issues of not just access to education, but quality of learning as we focus on literacy and numeracy skills to build the foundation for employability and livelihood skills.”

  • Improved teaching skills, gateway to Child Rights, SDGs in Nigeria

    Improved teaching skills, gateway to Child Rights, SDGs in Nigeria

    By Joyce Remi-Babayeju

    The United Nations Children Emergency Fund, UNICEF has warned that lack of Foundational literacy and Numeracy among school children of primary one to primary three is an infringement on Child Rights to basic education and non achievement of Sustainable development Goals for children. Joyce Remi-Babayeju takes a look at how improved teaching skills would aid in achieving the Child Rights and all SDGs for children.

    ——————————————————–

    It is no longer news that 10.5 million children in Nigeria are out of school while 70% of children in school cannot read and write. No thanks to improper implementation and domestication of the UN Child Rights Act by the three tiers of government and lately the humanitarian crisis which has enveloped the North Eastern part of the country.

    More recently UNICEF, has announced that in Nigeria children at the primary school level are still grappling with the act of reading and writing due to poor Foundational literacy and Numeracy, FLN, which has put the Nigerian educational system below the global standard of learning.

    The UN Child Rights and Sustainable Development Goals, SDGs, 17 can be said to be two sides of a coin because the two declarations harps on human rights. And more specifically SGD 4 is about giving quality education to children irrespective of their family status, race, colour or nationality.
    And most importantly, no child should be left behind in accessing quality education.

    But from the look of things the SDGs and indeed SDG 4 seems a hard knot for Nigeria to crack if the children are still far from acquiring Foundational literacy and Numeracy skills at age 10 using the UNICEF approved teaching methods.

    Failure in giving children the basic FLN skills amounts to a weak educational system and non implementation of approved technical teaching methods at this basic stage of schooling summarily amounts to denial of the Child Rights which is human right.

    The right to quality and functional education is the right of every child. More important, giving every child the right to Foundational literacy and Numeracy is tantamount to Child Rights and attainment to SDG 4 and indeed all the 17 SDGs.

    At a UNICEF 2 Day Media Dialogue on SDGs as Child Rights in Kano,on Foundational literacy and Numeracy, FLN, in Nigeria the UNICEF Officer – in- Charge , OIC, UNICEF Field Office in Kano, Elhadji Issakha Diop represented by Rahana Mohammed Farah said that 10.5 million out of school children is worrying because of denial of Literacy and Numeracy of children in Nigeria.

    According to Diop, Nigeria is facing serious learning crisis with the whooping number of children in school who do not have the basic skills of reading and writing.

    Diop noted,”Talking about children’s rights, Education is one of such rights. Education is a fundamental human right, and that right is well-articulated in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, the (CRC) which guides the work of UNICEF, and of course, in other legal instruments, including the Nigerian Constitution.”

    The Divisional Head, Education at the Abuja Municipal Area Council, AMAC, at the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, Mrs. Stella Adabanya in chat with Daybreak in Abuja on the state of education in the territory beamed more light on the challenges of teaching at the primary school level.

    Adabanya confirmed that the state of educational system at the LEA, Local Educational Authority level is worrisome; very poor and below the acceptable standard of teaching and learning for children at primary school level.

    She confirmed that Nigeria is facing learning crisis as a result of infiltration of unqualified teachers into the teaching profession because this category are employed to teach children without formal teaching skills.

    80% of teachers in the LEA do not pass through the Teachers Training College, while others are semi- illiterates,s Nigeria has to look at the caliber of people who are teaching, she emphasized.

    Also lack of provision of teaching tools for teaching among other requirements like teachers going through the Teachers Training College which was upgraded to the National College of Education, NCE to learn how to impact knowledge gained on the child. ” When a pupil has not learned, the teacher has not taught”, she stressed.

    Other requirements which aids teaching is provision of visual teaching aids and learning materials to assist teachers to teach the children soundly. ” If a children do not see physical things they won’t understand what you are teaching them.”

    Incentives to motivate teachers to deliver is very important at this level of teaching, she advised.

    Speaking on FLN crisis at the primary level of education in the country, the Educationist insists that the real problem is non implementation of the pre- nursery scheme of teaching and learning for children below the primary class.

    She said, ” What a child learns between the ages of three to five years remains with the child so there is a need to prepare the child for primary school at age six.”

    “To scale- up the Foundational literacy and Numeracy in Nigeria , there is need to introduce pre- nursery scheme into our LEA schools to balance up, Adabanya insisted.

    ” Pre- primary is necessary, but it is not introduced into the LEA because government does not attach any importance to this stage of education. Parents of pupils are also not exposed or educated to know the importance of this and mostly majority are not economically balance to spend on a child in pre- primary school.”

    UNICEF has said that factors like socio-cultural , Economic, policy, historic influence Early school enrollment.

    Data from the National Bureau of Statistics (2016) has shown that in Nigeria early education is still not considered compulsory and enrolment rate in pre- primary such as kindergarten, nursery is below 40%. In 2016 public pre-school enrolment dropped from 2,076,420 in 2015 to 1,457,461 in 2016 as published by NBS, ( Education Website).

    “On what government needs to do to jack up FLN is to improve teaching techniques to improve learning for children and to enable the teeming number of those who cannot read or write. Also government at the local level must first employ qualified and special teachers for this level of education.”

    80% of teachers at the LEA do not pass through the compulsory Teacher Training College, TTC.

    “As a wake up call from this half baked teaching methods , she insists, that compulsory pre- nursery education must be introduced into public schools as it is done in private schools. Teacher should be provided with adequate teaching aids and learning materials for pupils practical learning. Make teachers go for trainings, workshops, symposia, and also quiz and interactive sessions . Provide teaching aids and materials for practical lessons.”

    No problem with the school curriculum , we are using the same with private schools, she noted.

    UNICEF Education Specialist, Manar Ahmed in a virtual meeting at the media dialogue emphasized that in Nigeria 85% of the children do not have basic literacy education which focuses on inclusive quality for all children for SDG 4.

    All our children at 10 should be able to read and write , do simple maths operation, she noted.

    According to Ahmed, the root cause of learning crisis in Nigeria is that 69% of teachers are not qualified.

    She emphasized that the one year pre primary school is key to learning process. The pre- primary is enrolment in creche, playground, kindergarten, nursery which is an important teaching technique necessary for FLN teaching and learning process.

    Children with one year pre- primary education are less likely to drop out of school, Ahmed stressed.

    In the same way, UNICEF has called for huge investment on training of teachers, adding that for Nigeria to achieve the SDGs by 2030 there is need for a huge investment into it’s educational sector in the training of teachers for capacity building.

    Also there is the need to strengthen the educational sector through strategic designs , coordinate and effectual response policies and publicly financial quality learning programmes.

    Using the FLN Roadmap, UNICEF has proffered preventive measures in areas of Early learning and improved school readiness for children three to five years.

    The child agency stipulates the following guidelines which includes Improved teaching and learning practice materials with a specific focus on lower primary P1-3 system strengthening. Coordinated national effort, Institutionalized evidence based interventions , national learning assessment frameworks. Better programme designing and Modelling for scalability models validation and evidence generation for scaling including community development.

    UNICEF has stated ,”All ” children, no matter where they live or what their circumstances, have the right to quality education.”

    SDG 4 is on Education for all children so if a generation of children lack the basic skills of education which is reading and operating simple then they are lacking in formal education which is a scorecard for the attainment of the SDGs.

    Basically giving a child quality Education is giving the children the skills of life which is human right.

    This is a clarion call to the Government of Nigeria to prioritize education at the primary level through approved teaching methods which is basement for sound and qualitative inclusive educational system following the UNICEF Roadmap on FLN.

  • Nigeria Has 18.5 Million Children Out Of School – UNICEF

    Nigeria Has 18.5 Million Children Out Of School – UNICEF

    More than 18.5 million children in Nigeria have no access to education, with girls accounting for more than half the number, the United Nations Children’s Fund has said.

    This is a staggering surge in cases of out-of-school children in Africa’s most populous country, which UNICEF put at 10.5 million last year.

    “In Nigeria there are 18.5 million out-of-school children, 60 percent of these… are girls,” Rahama Farah, the head of UNICEF’s office in Kano, told local reporters on Wednesday.

    He said attacks on schools across the north by jihadists and criminal gangs who kidnap for ransom had contributed to the increase.

    Since Boko Haram jihadists kidnapped more than 200 schoolgirls from the northeastern town of Chibok in 2014, dozens of schools have been targeted in similar mass abductions.

    Last year, gunmen abducted around 1,500 schoolchildren, with 16 students losing their lives, UNICEF says.

    Most of the young hostages have been released after negotiations but some are still in captivity in forest hideouts.

    More than 11,000 schools have closed in Nigeria due to insecurity since December 2020, UNICEF said last month.

    But parents are also scared to send their children to learn in those still open, Farah said.

    “These attacks have created an insecure learning environment, discouraged parents and caregivers from sending their children to schools,” said Farah, adding that pupils too were afraid.

    Following the shutdown of schools across northern Nigeria, UNICEF has warned against a rise in reported cases of child marriages and early pregnancies.

    In the predominantly Muslim north, Farah said that only one in four girls from “poor, rural families” completed junior high school even before the mass abductions.

    Now the insecurity further “heightens gender inequity”, he said.

  • Nigeria May Loose Next Generation To Learning Crisis

    Nigeria May Loose Next Generation To Learning Crisis

    According to the United Nations Children Fund, UNICEF, 70 per cent of 10 year old children in Nigeria cannot read and write. In this piece, JOYCE REMI-BABAYEJU examines the consequences of this disturbing report on literacy crisis on the next generation of Nigerians. The fear, she says, is that they may end up as illiterates, even as the nation slides into foundational and numeracy crisis.

    Amina Umaru is a 10 year old innocent looking-girl who said she is a primary six pupil at Tunga Maje Primary School in Abuja. But her physical appearance looks like a 7 year old.

    Surprisingly, Amina who constantly giggles when answering simple questions barely understands English language. She told this our correspondent that she looks forward to going to a Secondary School if her parents permit her. Amina is among the 70% of Nigeria school children who cannot read or write in Nigeria.

    The United Nations Children Fund, UNICEF, has alerted the government of Nigeria that over 70 per cent of 10 year old children who are in school are lacking the foundational literacy and numeracy knowledge. This means that these segment of school children cannot read and write, which is the basic means of education.

    The 70 % of school children who lack learning skills, in addition to the 10.5 million children out of school children, already puts Nigeria in a staggering educational
    mess as a result of the nation’s preventable unresponsive educational systems. Consequently, it is doubtful if Nigeria will achieve the Sustainable development Goals, SDGs 4, and indeed all the SDGs.

    The figures of out of school children and the teeming number of children in classrooms who cannot read and write puts Nigerian on the verge of losing its next generation of leaders, professionals, politicians, technocrats and the likes out of the global committee of developed nations.

    Owing to the staggering learning crisis in Nigeria, the country in the near future may not be able to produce the needed and prerequisite manpower to wheel the country to the desired global destination through achievements of SDGs.

    If this crisis is not urgently addressed, it becomes further bleak for the next leaders as they may be bereft of required knowledge to manage the country and it’s resources. The hidden fear, UNICEF states, is that Nigeria is facing a staggering learning crisis with the lowest learning outcomes globally.

    As a matter of urgency, government should stand up to priotrize education at the foundational level, that is both at the pre- primary and primary levels by stepping up the educational system by training teachers, quality school curriculum, good learning environment, pre- school learning among other requirements for a good foundational learning.

    Experts agree that without the ratification and domestication of the UN Convention of the Rights of the Child, UN CRC, achieving the SDGs on quality education for all children and indeed all SDGs becomes a mirage and rhetorical in the agenda of the nation.

    The CRC is an international human rights treaty which sets out the civil, political, economic, social, health, and cultural rights of children. Nigeria as a signatory to the CRC is still found wanting in providing basic education which is a prerequisite for individual and national development.

    A whooping number of Nigerian children of school age are presently submerged in the miry clay of incompetent educational system, which will equally produce an incompetent population of adults in the near future.

    According to Dr. Chidi Ezinwa of the Department of Mass Communication, Enugu State University of Science and Technology, speaking on the SGGs as Child Rights, “SDGs is about human rights and it will remain a mirage until the rights of children are fulfilled.”

    Ezinwa noted that children not going to school is a denial of their human right, as well as denial of health care, girl circumcision, child marriage among others. While differentiating children from adult, he emphasized that until an individual is 18, he or she is still a child, adding that childhood period is a special protection time when they must go to school, must be allowed to grow, learn, play, develop and flourish with dignity.

    Ezinwa sounded a note of warning on duty bearers, that parents and care givers should be made to face the risk of going to jail and be sanctioned for not enrolling their children in school, noting that no child should be left behind. According to him, the quality of children we have today determines the quality of adults tomorrow.

    The SDG 4 hinges on quality education for children. Child education is a prerequisite to achieving the SDG. No county can achieve the 16 SDGs without the Child Rights and clearly Nigeria seems far from achieving these development goals.

    This sloppy trend of Nigerian’s educational system can only be linked to the loose thread of not only on bad policies on education but on poor implementation of such policies.

    At a 2-Day Media Dialogue on Foundational Literacy and Numeracy , FLN, on SDGs as Child Rights organized by UNICEF in collaboration with the Child Rights Information Bureau, CRIB, of the Ministry of Information and Culture in Kano, the UNICEF Officer- in – Charge, OIC, UNICEF Field Office in Kano , Elhadji Issakha Diop noted that it is presently in learning crisis with over 10.5 million children out of school with an additional 70% of 10 year children in school who do not know how to read and write.

    Diop who was represented by Rahana Mohammed Farah at UNICEF Kano Office said that, it is worrisome that 70% of 10 year old primary school children cannot read and write because of the denial of literacy and numeracy of children in Nigeria.

    According to Diop, Nigeria is one of the Sub- Saharan African countries facing learning crisis in which learning is not taking place, even for children that are in school. He emphasized that part of the rights of children is education of the child, but children are being denied the basics of education.

    Speaking on the state of Nigerian’s foundational education, Diop commented, “Talking about children’s rights, education is one of such rights. Education is a fundamental human right, and that right is well-articulated in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, the (CRC) which guides the work of UNICEF, and of course, in other legal instruments, including the Nigerian Constitution.”

    To address the challenge, he said, “achieving basic learning outcomes at the foundational level of education is key, adding that to improve learning outcomes in Nigeria, achieving basic foundational skills at that level of learning cannot be overemphasized.

    In a zoom presentation on Scaling Foundational Literacy and Numeracy in Nigeria by Manar Ahmed Sharouda, UNICEF Education Specialist, said that Foundational Literacy and Numeracy is very important for education in Nigeria.

    According to Sharouda, in Nigeria, 87 % of children do not have basic literacy which means that Nigeria is facing a staggering learning crisis with learning outcomes being the lowest globally. Over 70 per cent of children have not gained Foundational literacy.

    “All our children should be able to read and write and do simple mathematics operation.”
    The Education Specialist said that Nigeria seriously needs to close this gap of backwardness in it’s educational system.

    UNICEF however said that Nigeria could retrace it’s steps from falling completely into the doldrum of learning disaster. It needs to operate an inclusive quality education for all children for SDG 4 to be achieved by 2030.

    According to UNICEF, Nigeria needs to commit huge investment into its education sector in the area of training of teachers, in time, financial and institutionally. Sharouda said Nigeria should embark on the compulsory FLN Roadmap for preventive measures such as early learning and improved school readiness for children from 3 to 5 years, which is the pre – primary learning stage.

    Improved teaching and learning practice and materials with specific focus on the lower primary P 1-3 system strengthening.

    Sharouda in her presentation said, “70 percent of school children in Nigeria within the ages of 3-10 years lack basic Numeracy skills linking the causes to economic constraints, infrastructural provisions, policy implementation among other factors.”

    She further attributed the problem of learning crisis to factors low public spending on education, inadequate and unprepared workforce of qualified teachers which are in short supply; that is 69% of teachers are not qualified, insufficient physical resources and low school readiness, as 10 million children aged 3-5 are not enrolled in ECOD services.

    UNICEF said that in Sub- Saharan Africa , 87% of children are in learning crisis as they do not have basic literacy and that globally 53% of 10 year olds in low-income income countries like Nigeria cannot read or understand a simple story.

    There is therefore an urgent need for Nigeria to gird it’s loins by putting both infrastructure and super structures in place to close the gap on FLN programmes for the next population adults who would, in the near future, control the affairs of the nation.

    Like the computer, your input determines your output and outcomes. To achieve all the SDGs , Nigeria must step up it’s game on quality and inclusive education that would absorb the outstanding 10.5 million out of school children. Similarly, there is a need to jack up educational methods for a sustainable educational system using the UNICEF guidelines.

  • Chibok Girls: UNICEF urges FG to make  learning environment safe for children

    Chibok Girls: UNICEF urges FG to make learning environment safe for children

    By Joyce Remi-Babayeju

    Amid the unsafe learning space in Nigeria, the United Nations Children Fund, UNICEF, have called on the Nigerian. Government to provide a safe and secured learning environment for children.
    UNICEF made this called today in a statement to mark the eight year anniversary of of the kidnap of some 276 School girls from Government Girls Secondary School in Chibok, Borno State.

    The global agency frowned at the high rate of out of school children especially the girl child and called for an increased enrolment of girls in schools, their retention and completion of their education, noting that the spate of attacks on schools occasionally results into deaths.
    UNICEF Representative in Nigeria, Peter Hawkins said” ,Today marks eight years since the first known attack on a learning institution in Nigeria on April 14, 2014 in which 276 students of Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, in North-East Nigeria, were abducted by a non-state armed group.”

    “Since then, a spate of attacks on schools and abduction of students – sometimes resulting in their deaths – has become recurrent in the last two years, especially in the North-West and North-Central regions. Since December 2020, 1,436 school children and 17 teachers have been abducted from schools while 16 school children lost their lives.”

    “Unsafe schools, occasioned by attacks on schools and abduction of students, are reprehensible, a brutal violation of the rights of the victims to education, and totally unacceptable. Their occurrences cut short the futures and dreams of the affected students”, Hawkins noted.

    According to him, the attacks on learning institutions render the learning environment insecure and discourage parents and caregivers from sending their wards to schools, and the learners become frightened to the pursuit of learning.

    “The invisible harm school attacks inflict on the victims’ mental health is incalculable and irredeemable,” as girls had particularly been targeted, exacerbating the figures of out-of-school children in Nigeria, 60 percent of whom are girls, he stressed.

    The global agency recalled that in Nigeria, 11,536 schools were closed since December 2020 due to abduction and security issues, adding that such school closures have impacted the education of approximately 1.3 million children in the 2020/21 academic year.

    “This interruption of their learning contributes to gaps in children’s knowledge and skills and may lead to the loss of approximately $3.4 billion in these children’s lifetime earnings. This perpetuate cycles of poverty and inequality.”

    UNICEF said that with funding from donors, it is collaborating with the Nigerian government to protect children’s right to education in a safe and inclusive learning environment.

    This involves building the capacity of school-based management committees on school safety and security and strengthening community resilience”, the statement added.