WITH 2019 politicking
taking shape, former President Olusegun Obasanjo has decried the silence by the
female folk as deafening, calling on well-meaning women to commence
mobilization of youths and the female folk to take up commanding heights of
policy making and decision making in the country.
According to Obasanjo, it
was high time women optimized their huge population and influential positions
in families to negotiate their way up to taking up positions across different
levels of governance before men once again turn the tables against them in
2019.
Obasanjo made these calls
while delivering the keynote address at a programme held in Ibadan, on Friday,
organized by the Initiative for Information, Arts and Culture Development in
Nigeria and The American Corner, Ibadan, to engender women’s participation in
the political process.
Pointing to the continued
shrinking number of women in national leadership positions, evident in seven
women in the Senate and 15 in the House of Representatives, currently, Obasanjo
bemoaned that women were guilty of self-exclusion and failed to support
themselves to attain those political leadership positions.
Though he acknowledged male
chauvinism in the society, Obasanjo stressed the need for women to collaborate
to dismantle all barriers to their ascendancy, vigorously work to engender
gender balance and stand up to attain relevant political leadership positions.
Women, he pointed out will
wait in vain and continue to gravely suffer the consequences of poor governance
and poor leadership, if they continued to expect men to kindly toss power to
them.
Drawing from experiences of
women who had worked with him in government, Obasanjo argued that women were
superior to men in terms of integrity, competence, honesty, leadership
qualities, compassion, unwillingness to compromise and capability to deliver
good governance.
“As the storms are
gathering and the agitations to put an end to the reign of power addicts
becomes palpable and the shrilling voices of hitherto reclusive persons have
become restless and proactive, insisting that the structure of Nigeria must be
determined on a different basis of legitimacy, there seems to be a deafening
silence in the camp of our women.
“Our women should draw the
line to understand that there are times when silence is golden, at other times,
silence is just plain yellow.
“My dear sisters, you have
knowledge by going to schools and in your daily businesses and networking, you
should understand how to interpret the knowledge and facts but the ultimate is
for you to apply the facts, knowledge and network. That is what I call wisdom.
Be wise. Those men are yours by birth or by association. Negotiate and seize
the hour before they turn the table against you in 2019.
“Our women should take a
quick look at history and understand how they have marginalized themselves. How
can you yield the political space to be seized by some individuals who could
easily have been pocketed by the special ways you have been divinely wired?”
Obasanjo questioned.
Acknowledging that women
constituted 52 per cent of the nation’s position, Obasanjo averred that the
nation will continue to find it difficult to attain greatness, if half of the
women fail to attain higher echelon of corporate management and governance, but
only ended up in the kitchen or in the “other room”.
Also, at the event chaired
by renowned historian, Professor Bolanle Awe, Obasanjo emphasized the
imperativeness of girl-child education, especially the removal of all
hindrances to free and compulsory girl-child education, like culture, religion,
for the first nine years of formal school.
Historically, even till
date, Obasanjo noted that women were wont to be prosperous in the informal
sector, but bemoaned as perplexing and baffling, their failure to transfer
their successes to the realm of politics.
“Needless to say, women
constitute more than half of our population, in fact, 52 per cent in Nigeria
and their contributions to the Gross Domestic Product is great. No nation will
become great when half of her population ends up only in the kitchen and the
other room or get disproportionately discriminated against in the higher
echelon of corporate management and in governance.
“Is it that they are
expecting that men in their kindness will do all these struggles alone, win or
capture power and toss it at them? Do we think that our political space is
different from your boardroom and business empire where you have been playing?
My lived experience and the world as I know it is powered by shrewd
hard-headed, calculating individuals and the cornucopia of their mercy is
decidedly thin. It is unlike God’s rain that falls on the wicked and the
kind-hearted alike. No, our women must stand up to be counted.
“I should think something
is wrong somewhere when a majority allows themselves to be consigned to the
ghetto of the power equation. Women should know that they suffer double
jeopardy when the wicked or the clueless rule. Women and their children are
usually direct and indirect victims of mis-governance and poor governance and
poor leadership, hence should not wait until they are crushed by policies of
state made by men who have no regards for their involvement in policy making
and execution.
“That is why I say that I
hold the women themselves substantially responsible for what I call
self-exclusion in the governance structures and processes. I consider it a
sheer tokenism, if not arrant insult that our resourceful, intelligent and
morally upright women will be sidelined into the ghettos of power to function
perfunctorily by such unelevating nomenclatures such as women leaders or heads
of Ministry of Women Affairs?
“The progress and
development of any nation, I must say, is equal to the quality of women in that
society. This is because they are mothers, sisters, lovers, builders and
pro-creators by divine design. Thus, the women represent a tool for positive
change, depending on how they are treated and the levels of opportunities given
to them to actualize their potentials,” Obasanjo said.
In her remarks, Public
Affairs Officer, US Consulate, Nigeria, Ms Darcy Zotter, made reference to
studies that countries failed to grow without having women occupy political
positions in the same ratio as men.
To this end, she argued
that it was economically sound for women to participate in politics and bring
about economic development.
Zotter, specifically, urged
women to encourage themselves, be change makers, mobilise communities,
especially young voters.
Personalities at the event
included, President, Executive Committee, IACD, Professor Ayo Banjo; Professor
Akin Mabogunje; Oyo Commissioner for Women Affairs and Poverty Alleviation, Mrs
Atinuke Osunkoya; Mandela Washington Fellow, Mrs Edem Ossai; Dr Olajumoke
Morenikeji of the Department of Zoology, University of Ibadan; an entrepreneur,
Mrs Achenyo Idachaba-Obara; former Presidential candidate, Mrs Remi Sonaiya and
Executive Vice Chairman, Ibadan School of Government and Public Policy (ISGPP),
ISGPP, Dr Tunji Olaopa.
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