The Governor of the Central Bank of
Nigeria, Mr. Lamido Sanusi, on Thursday, decried the low literacy level
in the North saying that 93 per cent of female children in the region
lacked secondary education.
The apex bank boss, who said this at
this year’s Isaac Moghalu Foundation Leadership Lecture and Symposium
held in Abuja, said the situation, if left unchecked, was detrimental to
the economy.
The governor sited Jigawa State, where school completion rate among female is as low as seven per cent as an example.
Net enrolment of girls in schools in the country, according to him, is 22 per cent.
He said, “In the North-West, 70 per cent
of women between 20 and 29 are unable to read, compared to 9.7 per cent
in the South West.
“Only three per cent of females complete
secondary education in the Northern zone. Now how do you build the
country when 93 per cent of the girls in the most populous region of the
country do not complete secondary schools?
“We are only treating the symptoms and
not the ailment. We are spending so much on security compared to
education and healthcare services. We cannot succeed in security without
fixing the original problems
“If the women are sent to school and
they have access to proper healthcare services, there may not be need to
spend so much on security.”
He described illiteracy among women in
the region as frightening, adding that senior female officials in the
country had not done enough to assist the women folk.
Sanusi said, “The problem we have is
that women are their own enemies. If you are a female minister or hold
an important public position and after four years you cannot say what
you did for women, shame on you.
“Many of these women secure these
positions on the platform of gender, ethnicity among others and when
they get there, they forget the ladder on which they went there.
“They become the queen bee and do not want to share the limelight with other women.”
He charged women to hold their
counterparts, in leadership positions to account, adding that such move
would help to reduce neglect.
Also speaking at the event, the
Executive Director of IMoF, Mrs. Maryanne Moghalu, said the foundation
would continue to focus on key areas to assist the society.
The areas, she said, include human
capital development through education for under privileged children,
strategic learning infrastructure support for educational institutions,
vocational skills training, and public policy advocacy.
Moghalu added that the foundation would also examine the success of the country in developing women to leadership positions.
She expressed the need for women to be
well trained and prepared for leadership roles in the public, private
and non-profit sectors.
Moghalu stressed that the absence of
women in leadership position had been identified by many countries
including Nigeria as a major challenge in the process of economic and
social development.
The foundation was founded in 2005 in
memory of Mr. Isaac Moghalu, one of Nigeria’s pioneer diplomats and a
former permanent secretary.
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