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Group Trains Female Students On How To Tackle Violence


A non governmental organisation, Value Female Network (VFN) has organised an awareness and sensistation workshop for female secondary school students in Osun state on how to resist violence against women in the society.


VFN tagged the three day adolescent boot camp held on the premises of Baptist High School in Osogbo and supported by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), "Growing Into Revolutionary Ladies. The seminar was aimed at educating and enlightening female children on how to know their rights, tackle violence and be reproductive in the society.


Speaking on how the participants could grow into revolutionary ladies, Miss Oluwatoyosi Afolabi, tasked them not to see themselves as being inferior to their male counterparts as they pursue their dreams in the society.


Afolabi asked the female students to see the era of gender inequality has been over saying that they should discover their potentials and grow over their barriers in pursuing their dreams.


Meanwhile, the head of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), Lagos Liaison Office, Dr. Omolaso Omosehin while speaking at the programme charged governments at all levels to provide alternative means of livelihood for traditional birth attendants and female circumcissers as a way of curbing the rising female genital mutilation in the country.


Speaking on the rise female circumcission, Omosehin advised government at all levels to provide alternative means of livelihood to those who hold on to cutting girl child as their only job saying that this would help reduce the trend in the country.


According to the Reproductive health expert, some of the people that engage in mutilating female genital only hold on to the practice because they don't have another means to eke out a living with.


He said, "we also need to educate the masses generally on the negative effects of Female Genital Mutilation. Governments should also think of how to give female circumsisers alternative means of livelihood because most of them take this act of cutting girls as their only means livelihood and they make a living from it. So, I want government to give them alternative means of income."


Meanwhile,  victims of sexual assaults in Nigeria have been advised to be courageous and report their violators to necessary quarters rather than keeping quite and allowing perpetrators to go unpunished.


According to Omosehin, a Reproductive Health specialist of the United Nations organisation, the decision of victims to ignore their violators by not reporting their ordeals had been encouraging rape cases on the country.


Omosehin however urged victims to promptly expose their violators in order for necessary investigation to be carried out stressing that anyone found guilty of the act would not go unpunished.


On the stigma that might trail the victims after revealing their ordeals, Omosehin advised the citizenry against stigmatising those affected insisting that "rape is a crime; the mistakes most women or victims make is that when it happens to them, they keep quite. What their silence means is that they are saying rape should continue to happen.


" They should speak out and be assured that there are laws in place to punish violators. If violators are exposed and punished according to law, rape cases would be reduced in our society," he assured.


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