IDEVAW 2022: MAMA Centre advocate end to abuse against women

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By IJEOMA UKAZU

To mark the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women, IDEVAW, 2022, the Mothers And Marginalised Advocacy Centre, MAMA Centre, has called on all stakeholders to prevent gender-based violence against women in the informal sector.

The Centre also states that it has unveiled its women empowerment project to commemorate the global event.

In a statement made available to our correspondent and signed by the
Executive Director, MAMA Centre, Chioma Kanu noted that the Centre under the aegis of the Accountability for Empowerment, A4E, project will be rolling strategic activities to advance socio-economic empowerment of Udi women/rightsholders in Enugu state.

With this year’s theme; “UNiTE! Activism to End Violence against Women and Girls”, the group commended afforts by stakeholders to ensuring the safety and welfare of women.

The statement reads, “We acknowledge and commend all emerging and existing passion-driven efforts at the individual level with greater curiosity to advance human rights and preserve the dignity of women and girls across the globe.

“This to a large extent, includes human/women’s rights activists, who are currently held captive as political prisoners, tortured or silently murdered through varied extra-judicial means, or subjected to degrading treatments while protesting violence against women and girls or giving voice to the voiceless.

“MAMA Centre reiterate serious concerns that violence against women and girls persists at an unprecedented rate in a secluded dimension as witnessed in recent times, especially at the family level, where women or girls are remanded or held captive at home against their will, tortured and starved for their refusal to be subjective to undignified social norms or maintaining an independent position on their lives and future.”

The statement further reads, “We on this note recall and condemn in totality, the recent cases in Yobe state involving the death of Sadiya Salihu, a middle-aged woman, who was reportedly locked by her husband, Ibrahim Yunusa Bature, in a room for one year without food; the death of an Abuja-based gospel artiste, Osinachi Nwachukwu, whose life was cut short through alleged abuse and domestic violence orchestrated by her husband in April 2022; and many other unreported cases across the country.

“We also observed little policy intervention or preventive engagement in the informal sector, which has hitherto harboured severe but under-reported cases of sexual abuse, harassment and rape of women and adolescent girls without appropriate sanctions. We are worried that this unchecked arm of the society has normalised violence against women and adolescent girls as a daily phenomenon.”

MAMA Centre express total displeasure over emerging policy moves at sub-national levels to frustrate collective effort championed by Civil Society groups to promote social inclusion, social justice, self-determination, self-sufficiency and end violence against women and girls.

The not-for-profit organisation call for targeted preventive engagement, policy interrogation and appropriate sanctions against systemic mainstreamed gender-based violence in the informal sector and within families.

While also calling for an increased psycho-emotional support system for the survivors of gender-based violence through institutionalised mechanisms like ‘safe space’ and proactive enforcement agencies to fully implement relevant provisions of existing laws including the Violence Against Persons Prohibition Act.

They demand prompt Presidential assent to the Anti-sexual Harassment Bill to protect students against sexual harassment, as well as prevent sexual harassment of students by educators in tertiary institutions.

MAMA Centre also demand immediate release from political captivities, all human and women’s rights activists across the world.

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