By Sani Idris
The Empowering Women for Excellence Initiative (EWEI), an NGO, has displayed an art and cultural event, featuring drama, poems and music, to campaign against sexual harrasment in Kaduna.
The colourful event brought together various stakeholders from the academia, civil societies, MDAs and students.
The event, which revolves around arts and culture, is meant to reduce sexual harassment in public spaces.
It is under the ‘We For Them’ (WFT) project, an initiative by EWEI.
Salome Yakubu, the Focal Person of the WFT project, said EWEI, founded in 2008, has been steadfast in its commitment to providing multisectoral interventions aimed at empowering and supporting women and girls.
She said the WFT, spanning from April 2022 to March 2024, received valuable support from the African Women’s Development Fund (AWDF).
Yakubu said the primary objective of the programme was to address and reduce sexual and gender-based violence, with a special focus on combating sexual harassment and abuse in public spaces.
She said in pursuit of combating sexual harassment and abuse, EWEI collaborated with the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW) and the Academic Staff Union of Polytechnics (ASUP), Kaduna State Polytechnic Branch.
Yakubu, therefore, said the partnerships with the organisations underscored the importance of collective efforts in combating sexual harassment and promoting safer public spaces.
Mr Mendie Jeremiah, the Assistant Focal Person for the WFT, said the project worked with 130 direct beneficiaries cutting across 50 from ASUP and 80 from the NURTW.
Jeremiah explained that the NURTW was a male dominated union, where the project worked in collaboration, to reduce violence in motor parks.
“We identified these bodies because, like the ASUP, they are one of the strongest unions in polytechnics.
“We aim to see that our beneficiaries in the ASUP and NURTW serve as champions and advocates against sexual harrasment in the institutions and motor parks.
“In Kaduna Polytechnics for instance, they have the 2019 sexual harrasment policy. what we are doing along side is looking at any gap if any, and make recommendations when ever the policies are due for review.
“In the course of our seminar with members of the NURTW who are our direct beneficiaries, the NURTW came up with a by-law, marrying their constitutions with the Violence Against Persons Prohibition Law (VAPPL).
“The by-laws do not in anyway supercede the NURTW Constitution nor the VAPPL, but a working template for them within the motor parks to know and be aware of repercussions when one is found wanting.
“The NURTW will step it down to their loaders, drivers, shop owners within the parks and others on the need for safe motor parks devoid of sexual harrasment,”Jeremiah said.
Also, Mrs Fatima Ahmed, a member of ASUP, Kaduna Polytechnic, commended EWEI for the initiative towards ensuring that sexual harrasment was drastically reduced in public places.
She said that sexual harrasment could not be totally eliminated, but could be addressed in many ways.
“At the academia, we engage with staff and students; the students and staff can be harassed. with the WFT, we are optimistic that violence against women and girls, sexual harrasment of both gender at homes, places of work and even within family circle is reduced to the bearest minimum,” Ahmed said.
NAN reports that some of the drama plays, were sensitive in passing messages about “Who a woman is” and sexual harrasment which cuts across the gender.
The dramas, poems, dance and other displays, were solution driven, thereby communicating on what to do, where to go, who to report to when sexual harrasment or violence happens.
NAN also reports that a panel of discussants featured in the event.
The forum discussed barriers like cultural beliefs and stereotypes that hindered prosecution of offenders of sexual harrasment. (NAN)
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