Wife of Lagos State Governor, Mrs.
Bolanle Ambode has urged lawyers to evolve new ways of making more
progress on gender equality, women development and child welfare,
saying that no society can achieve rapid development when children
and women are relegated to the background.
Speaking at the African Women Lawyers
Association’s parley, held at Victoria Island, Lagos, as part of
activities marking the Annual General Conference of the Nigerian Bar
Association (NBA), Mrs. Ambode said it was important for members of
the legal profession, especially the women among them to be at the
vanguard of championing the course of issues relating to the welfare
and development of women and children.
The wife of the Governor, who was
decorated as Matron and Mother of the African Child at the parley,
also lauded the contributions of women lawyers towards improvements
recorded in child and women rights in the State, the country and the
continent.
She said children and women in Nigeria
and Africa faced a brighter future because of steady progress
recorded in the area of their rights, noting that it was gratifying
that Lagos State was the first to pass the Child Rights Law,
following the footprints of the Federal Government.
According to her, “Lagos State has
taken proactive steps in this direction. It was the first State in
the country to pass the Child Rights Law after the Federal Government
pioneered the process in 2003. Under the law, children are fully
protected and those who infringe on those rights are apprehended and
prosecuted.
“The State also has a law in place
against domestic violence. The law protects women and children
against all forms of violence in the home. Through these laws, Lagos
State has ensured that women and children are reasonably insulated
from reckless rights infringements with impunity.”
Also speaking, Lagos State Chief Judge,
Justice Olufunmilayo Atilade, represented by Mrs. Abiola Soladoye,
praised the contributions of women lawyers to the growth of legal
practice, just as she urged them to reinvent themselves and translate
their numerical strength to positive actions.
In her welcome address, President of
the association, Mrs. Mandy Demechi-Asagba, noted that the group
stood for the protection, promotion and presentation of the rights
and interest of women and children in Nigeria and Africa, stressing
that they condemned all forms of violence against women, including
sexual assault, child molestation, rape, child marriage, genital
mutilation, abduction and other forms of discrimination and violence
against them.
She said: “The association seeks to
change the course of the 21st century, addressing key challenges as
inequality, poverty and violence against women and girls, and
stressed that violence against women and children is at its peak and
requires emergency, desperate, deliberate and purposeful action
before it consumes all.”
On her part, the guest speaker, Mrs.
Nana Oye Lithur, who noted that child marriage was a global issue,
urged the Nigerian chapter of the association to take the lead in the
push for new laws to protect the rights of women and the girl-child
from barbaric practices.
The parley was attended by prominent
women lawyers including the first woman Senior Advocate of Nigeria
(SAN), Lady Folake Sholanke.
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