Thursday, November 7, 2013

Say No to Water Poverty



#2011Social Diary
March 22, 2011 at 2:35pm

Water for Cities: Responding to Urban Challenges

Thank God! This years’ world water day celebration is coming in such a time as this that is an election year. 
The objective of World Water Day 2011 is to focus international attention on the impact of rapid urban population growth, industrialization and uncertainties caused by climate change, conflicts and natural disasters on urban water system; and to identify with millions of people  worldwide (particularly urban dwellers) who suffer water poverty; hence the theme: Water for Cities: Responding to Urban challenge. (#2011)




The Situation

It is worrisome that each second, the urban population grows by 2 people. This is the first time in human history that most of the world’s population live in cities: 3.3 billion people…and 38% if the growth is represented by expanding slums, while the city populations are increasing faster than city infrastructure can adapt…women and children walk 40 billion hours per year carrying unsafe water weighing 18kg;…     
Parties instead of campaigning about issue they keep saying irrelevant thing, was watching a campaign rally held in Osogbo yesterday (21st March) of one of the political parties, and the only thing they could say was to advised their followers particularly their female followers to dress seductively on elections day because men in their strongest opposition party are womanizers…haba! Is that an issue, when you are suppose to be telling the people how you will bring food, water and other necessity of life to their home.
The state of portable water is a thing of great concern, was expecting they parties that carried out their campaigns this week to cash on the celebration of world water day to sell their mandate. If in Urban cities there are no affordable sources of drinking water, what would the story be in the rural areas? For me the major reason I might not vote for my incumbent governor is on the issue of water imagine that a state housing the second largest river in Nigeria, with no affordable source of water, the masses has to pay heavily to get drinking water which at times they are not sure of its safety. On assumption of office he promised to expand on the existing water project, he will construct 500,000 VIP latrines and it will be in use at the celebration of the second anniversary of his regime, lo and behold he is left with two months and the project is still not completed… he is leaving us in a worst condition than he met us because the renovation has made water situation terrible in the state…. No latrines at all! (Even now inn 2013 I do not think anything as change, he now planning to go to the Senate)

As we march in mass to vote let’s put in mind those that we give us good drinking water, because with affordable source of water, many killer diseases (cholera, diahorea, and many intestinal diseases) etc   will be reduced… with one voice lets demand for effective political leadership, demand for our rights to have safe water supply, adequate sanitation services in our schools, health institutions, public places. All by the power of our thumbs! My Vote go change naija. (2015 is close by again)

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

No More Carry along: #Education First


“Education to me is very important, it makes someone to understand life…but for me formal education should be incorporated with vocational training, so that when one is out of school and get no government job or any work at all, one can fall back on his skills and start private business, that is if government will give needed assistance to start..”.
-           Ismaila Kaduna-Nigeria 28
-          “Without education you cannot go anywhere, it is the best life for me…so more schools be built in our neighborhood…and school fees reduced or removed” – Hadiza 16yrs Kaduna-Nigeria 

`ekan samu wure! which though not the real meaning literally means I have found the place drop me here or am getting off here in Hausa language a popular language spoken in Northern part of Nigeria and some part of Africa it is a daily phrase you hear if you commute through the public transport system. That phrase seems to be the shout of African youths as regard the reality of illiteracy, we are shouting, we are tired please drop us from this carry along and non-inclusive policy on all matters that concerns young people. Whereas few people dispute youths’ right to education, few efforts are made to ensure that youths actually benefit from education services. 
I have grown up to know that education does not save you from deception, even at that it is still the only way out of oppression anyway. I know no system is perfect but here at home in Africa we must stop using that as an excuse to cut off a generational consciousness, because it is only a generational consciousness powered through education that can bring about the desired impact when young people get leadership power or get into places of influence.      
I once read it somewhere that we have no future without children; worst of all what kind of future would we have with children without any form of education, I have witnessed a few crises both political and tribal here in Nigeria and those that are used as fighters are young people with no education.  I see children that are religiously confused both Muslim and Christian and worst of all those that do not belief in anything and they are more in number and can be bought over by the highest bidder because they have no means of livelihood. They do not understand how a civilized society works; they wake-up with no life goal; football viewing centres is their homes. However all this have to change, we as young people are saying youths are more of an asset, not really beneficiary of developmental project, like it seems now.

In over 15 years of serving humanity through volunteering for youthful causes from educational outreach to psychosocial health issues among youths, am a living witness to what education at whatever level can do, and when combined with life skills training, then you are creating a generation that would do wonders. I have learnt the first lesson of youth participation, that is there is no place for the youth in leadership, not  because we cannot lead but because the adult that failed in their youth, are afraid of what ‘I do not know’, so for youths to earn their place at the top, they must bring  innovative ideas to the table, this I did through an inert embodiment of a balance necessary to learn quickly and perform exceptionally in new, challenging environments. Adding enthusiastic desire to take any initiative and being hard working; you must learn to put them at ease, while with you.  We have to be genuine, optimistic and have a confident personality, with well-developed leadership skills, and have ways to engage challenges and challenge self and others to work collaboratively and approach issues in an innovative ways; these were the virtues that earned me a place among the ‘strong and mighty at that level’.  I would not have done that, if I was not privileged to have gotten some form of education and training.

To collaborate my story that we are tired, I decided to interview our present gate man Ismaila Jamiau 28 years old, and a house-made to my neighbour Hadiza Emmanuel a 16 years old girl in the quarters where I live in Kaduna state-Nigeria, currently ending a one year volunteer service, teaching in a college; Ismaila has the desire to go back to school after failing to get the needed five credit from high school (secondary school) to get him to college, as I wrote this piece he has gone back to register to re-sit for his examinations, in his words “Education to me is very important, it makes someone to understand life…but for me formal education should be incorporated with vocational training, so that when one is out of school and get no government job or any work at all, one can fall back on his skills and start private business, that is if government will give needed assistance to start. Also pray man-know-man should end with our parents and politicians from our areas should also pick the challenge to give educational scholarship”        

For Hadiza, she was brought from the village to stay with a family; she attends evening secondary schools that fits to her work schedule, does her chores in the morning, while her employers and their kids are away to work and school, so on their return, she heads to school, the concern is the fatigue and concentration level in school, after such a tedious work, but she feels, it is better than no education at all, at least she can read now and getting to write gradually. “….though to be honest afternoon school is not that good because them the environment is not conducive to learn mathematics…but for many people like me that cannot wake and get ready for school, unless we finish our house work, it is helping us to at least get a form of education. So I appeal to government to build more school in our neighbourhood and get us better environment.” 

We are tired of relying on politics and politicians, because we only do what is popular depending on their opinion and appear better that we are; we want to be productive, becoming better than we appear and provide substance. So the appeal is build more schools that are equipped with instructional materials, open more vocational centres and get trained and qualified personnel to train us, until then ekan samu wure!, we would not go with carry along again.      

(Extract from a piece written in August 2012 for UNESCO Education for All Monitoring Group Report 2012, 1st Edition of Youth Version)