2022 Girl-Child Day: Akeredolu’s wife reiterates commitment to build future female leaders
Mrs Betty Anyanwu-Akeredolu, Wife of the Ondo State Governor, has reiterated her commitment and dedication to building strong female leaders of the future.
Anyanwu-Akeredolu said this in a statement signed and made available to newsmen by her Senior Special Assistant, Media, Oluwatobi Fademi on Tuesday in Akure to mark the 2022 International Day of the Girl Child.
The International Day of the Girl Child is a day declared by the United Nations that seeks to empower girls and highlight the needs and challenges that girls face throughout the globe.
Anyanwu-Akeredolu, who was the founder of the Bemore Empowered Girls Foundation, a girls-only Information and Communications Technology (ICT) and solar boot camp said that she would never relent on her passion for building girls in areas of leadership and technology.
The wife of the governor explained that her Foundation would continue to ensure that the female child would help the nation overcome various obstacles.
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“On Sept. 3rd, 388 young girls graduated from the 2022 Bemore Summer Bootcamp, making a total of over 2000 girls who had gone through rigorous two weeks of training expanding their skills and capacity.
“They were trained in ICT and solar technology to demystify science and technology and put a lie to the age-long prejudice about these fields being the exclusive preserve of men.
“They have been armed with life-enhancing skills so that they can have financial security and defeat poverty. We have taught them that leadership is gender-neutral,” she said.
On the theme of 2022 international day of the girl child “Our time is now- Our rights, our future”, Anyanwu-Akeredolu gave examples of women including herself who overcame various challenges in their quest to shatter the proverbial “glass ceiling”.
According to her, whatever your male counterpart can do, you can likewise do, and even do better. It is indeed our time!
“My story, as a village girl from the remote Emeabiam, Owerri West, Imo State, who faced and scaled many hurdles to become a towering First Lady should remind you that female education is not a waste.
“Kamala Harris’ story as the 49th United States Vice-President should remind you that girls can be more.
“Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, the 24th President of Liberia and the First elected female Head of State in Africa, has demonstrated to you that a woman can lead a country and that leadership is about capacity and not about gender.
“Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala who now serves as the Director-General of the World Trade Organization is the first woman and first African to lead the Organization as president tells of the capacity of a woman.
“Our own Professor Adenike Oladiji, of the Federal University of Technology, Akure (FUTA), has proven to you that a woman can reach the zenith of her academic career and also become the head of a university.
“Team Nigeria, at the 22nd edition of the Commonwealth Games, which was concluded on August 8 in Birmingham, United Kingdom won the most medals.
The Nigerian team won 12 gold, nine silver, and 14 bronze medals. Women won all 12 gold medals and currently, in Iran, teenage girls are leading the protests for women’s rights,” she said.
Anyanwu-Akeredolu, therefore, encouraged young girls in Ondo State and beyond to aim higher saying gone were the days girls would be made to play the second fiddle.
According to her, the world now belongs to both men and women and in fact, women are making new impressions as opposed to being the ‘weaker vessel’. Women are leading the global space as much as men are.
The wife of the governor, however, emphasised the fact that girls around the world continue to confront tremendous hurdles to their education, physical and emotional welfare, and the protection needed for a life free of violence.
“Over the years there has been increased attention on issues that matter to girls amongst governments, policymakers and the general public, and more opportunities for girls to have their voices heard on the global stage.
“Yet, investments in girls’ rights remain limited and girls continue to confront a myriad of challenges to fulfilling their potential including child marriages, poor learning opportunities, violence, and discrimination.
Anyanwu-Akeredolu also called on stakeholders to respond to their tasks by nurturing spaces for gender inclusion in decision-making, supporting quality, inclusive education and prioritization of the well-being of young girls.