Using advocacy training to tackle violence against women in Nigeria
Zainab Gbobaniyi is a lawyer and advocacy trainer with Women for Women International.
I became determined to champion the rights of women and girls in Nigeria.
- Economic violence: when a woman gets married, any property she owns belongs to her husband. If she gets divorced, she cannot take with her. Even an unmarried woman, when her father dies, will not get any inheritance. Even though women do most of the farm work, they can’t access their earnings. Land is so important here, so when women are excluded from owning and inheriting it, the cycle of poverty continues. On average, the women we serve are earning just $0.35 per day when they start our training.
- Physical and sexual violence: There is a common belief that a man should beat his wife to correct her, it is seen as normal.Our constitution is silent about spousal rape; whether a woman wants to have sex or not, her husband can force himself on her. Men will target young girls out selling goods at the market. If a girl is raped, people will say, ‘why did you wear that dress? It was your own fault!’ A third of Nigerian women have experienced VAW, with one in five subjected to physical violence.
- Child marriage: 44% of girls in Nigeria are married before they are 18, and in the marginalised, rural communities where we work in north-central Nigeria, this number is often much higher. When girls are married and have children at a young age, before their bodies are fully developed, there is a high risk of vesico-vaginal fistulae – this is a big problem in the communities where we work.
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subtitle:
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