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2023: Candidates Must Be Questioned On Gender Equality – Toyin Saraki

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The Founder-President of the Wellbeing Foundation Africa, Toyin Saraki, has said Nigerians must question candidates on their plans for gender equality as campaigns for the 2023 general election takes center stage.

Saraki, who is a member of the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health, said this in an interactive session with the press unit of the PMNCH, the world’s largest alliance of more than 1,000 organizations for women’s, children’s, and adolescents’ health and wellbeing.

Saraki, who was appointed as the World Health Organisation Foundation’s Ambassador for Global Health, also lamented the rejection of gender equality bills at the National Assembly during the constitutional amendment, a move that sparked a series of protests.

She said women’s progress had been stifled by a glass wall erected by a small group of men.

Responding to a question, the former first lady of Kwara State said, “So it’s quite clear, especially what is happening in Nigeria now, but we are going to look at the way we engage with the war for gender equality and we are going to have to exercise our voting right actually. We are going to ask our candidates questions before we vote for them, not after we vote for them.”

Speaking on the theme, ‘Gender equality today for a sustainable tomorrow’, the activist said African women must be applauded for their dedication to development and nation-building.

“With the women’s protests going on in Nigeria at the National Assembly, the world has quite a bit more work to do, but I am very confident that the Nigerian woman is hardworking, she may have been disappointed, but she is undaunted and she will succeed,” Saraki stated.

On the persistent disparities caused by gender and disability in Africa, the philanthropist said older people with disabilities are three times more likely to be denied health care, four times more likely to be treated badly in the health care system, and 50 percent more likely to suffer catastrophic health expenditure.

“So disability has a higher problem in lower-income countries, where 80 percent of the people with disability are not counting, though old people with disability face discrimination and are often invisible in policies formulation, women and girls with disabilities are subjected to double discrimination and this is so because of their gender bias,” Saraki added.

She added that poor data availability had made it difficult to provide interventions for persons with disabilities.

This, she said, was compounded by the common practice in Africa where families hide their relatives who have disabilities.

“So we need to recognize that the African culture hides disability, we hide and look after them in the home, but because we are hiding, the disabled ones cannot access available facilities. When I saw all the people bringing out disabled children, I was asking them, I didn’t know you have a disabled child and their response was that they never knew how they could access help.

“So we should stop the stigmatization because most of them had no knowledge of who to go to for help or how to access available facilities,” she added.

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