IWD: AKPATA VOWS TO DEFEND WOMEN’S RIGHTS
The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) President, Mr. Olumide Akpata has assured that the association will deploy both legislative advocacy and public interest litigation to secure the rights of women and children.
In a Press Statement he personally signed to mark this year’s International Women’s Day (IWD), Akpata said that “NBA will continue to play its role through focused legislative advocacy and, where necessary, public interest litigation with a view to achieving an egalitarian society that accommodates all and sundry, particularly women and girls.”
He decried the plight of women and girls as a “akin to a global pandemic,” adding that “All over the world, women are at the receiving end of policies, oftentimes conveniently anchored on culture and religion, which leave them short-changed. Also, in various theatres of conflict, women have continued to bear the heavier brunt of crises that are literally man-made. The recent events in Afghanistan and Ukraine are an eloquent albeit harrowing testament to this fact.”
Though he acknowledged “that we have in recent times recorded some measure of success in our efforts at fixing this anomaly,” he noted that “it is also true that there is still a lot of work to be done. In this regard, let me commend all women in civil society, the professions, academia and other segments of society who continue to sustain the tempo of this noble cause.”
Below is the full text of the statement made available to CITY LAWYER.
On our part, the NBA will continue to play its role through focused legislative advocacy and, where necessary, public interest litigation with a view to achieving an egalitarian society that accommodates all and sundry, particularly women and girls.
STATEMENT OF THE NBA PRESIDENT OLUMIDE AKPATA ON THE OCCASION OF INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY 2022
Dear Colleagues,
On behalf of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), I join the global community in commemorating the International Women’s Day (IWD), 2022. The IWD is a day set aside by the United Nations to draw global attention to the plight of women and girls and to strive towards the attainment of an egalitarian society where circumstances of birth such as gender, will play no role in the socio-political relations of society.
The theme of this year’s IWD: Break The Bias, is very apt as it speaks to the need to dismantle the limiting barriers of patriarchy and other biases that have kept girls and women at the back seat of our national life. The recent events at the National Assembly, where syndicated Bills targeted at a more inclusive representation of women in politics and governance was opposed by a male dominated parliament, speaks volumes of the structural ramifications of this social menace.
With women and girls comprising almost half of our national population, ideas and policies that tend to limit their inclusion in our national life tantamounts to shooting ourselves in the foot, as a nation is only as good as the wealth of human resources it can leverage from its population irrespective of gender. Indeed, it is not for nothing that the framers of our Constitution have guarded against discrimination on grounds of gender, amongst other considerations, in Section 42(2) thereof. I daresay that this Section provides the moral and legal justifications for a gender balanced and inclusive society.
Whilst I have spoken to the plight of women and girls in the context of Nigeria, it is a fact of our existence that the situation we are confronted with is akin to a global pandemic. All over the world, women are at the receiving end of policies, oftentimes conveniently anchored on culture and religion, which leave them short-changed. Also, in various theatres of conflict, women have continued to bear the heavier brunt of crises that are literally man-made. The recent events in Afghanistan and Ukraine are an eloquent albeit harrowing testament to this fact.
Even as I acknowledge that we have in recent times recorded some measure of success in our efforts at fixing this anomaly, it is also true that there is still a lot of work to be done. In this regard, let me commend all women in civil society, the professions, academia and other segments of society who continue to sustain the tempo of this noble cause.
On our part, the NBA will continue to play its role through focused legislative advocacy and, where necessary, public interest litigation with a view to achieving an egalitarian society that accommodates all and sundry, particularly women and girls.
Finally, I congratulate all women and girls on this momentous occasion even as we continue in our struggle to dismantle the walls and prejudices of patriarchy and other biases that limit and short-change them.
Happy International Women’s Day!
OLUMIDE AKPATA
President
8th March, 2022
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