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Black Rome: 32 Million Nigerian Children Missing! by Armypolicecults: 4:04pm On Jun 15, 2020


Nigeria: 32 Million Nigerian Children Missing

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Deutsche Welle

Children

11 SEPTEMBER 2018

Daily Trust (Abuja)

By Judd-Leonard Okafor

In Africa, 85m children don't exist officially; 32m of them are in Nigeria. When Brian Adeyemi was born three years ago, his birth was recorded in the maternity register of a private hospital--and certified on a hospital letterhead card.

Before 1992, record of his birth and existence would have ended there. But new policy mandating the National Population Commission to register every birth since 1992 meant his parents had to take his hospital card to the commission's office.

A registrar issued an official birth certificate from the commission.

John Udo's mother took her one-year old on a routine post-natal visit to Customs Hospital in Karu when she heard a registrar was visiting. She filled out a form, paid N200 and took home an official birth certificate for her son.

Both children officially count among Nigeria's children, with certificates to prove it. Some seven in 10 children overall across Nigeria still do not have their births registered. They are the missing children.

By last year, only 47 in every 100 children aged under five were registered, according to the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey.

NPC deployed RapidSMS, an online database to track registered births nationwide.

The database collects real-time information over SMSs sent by birth registrars scattered across the country, ticking upward on each new registration.

In August alone, the births of 144,047 children aged under one were registered. A total 223,227 children aged one to five were registered, alongside 92,387 children aged over five.

Cumulatively, births of a total 1,573,096 children under age one have been registered by August. Some 3,027,962 children aged one to five have been registered. The births of 1,265,485 children aged above five have also been registered.

The dashboard updates twice monthly--in the middle and at the end. It is useful as a monitoring and allows states to analyse how well the birth registration runs within their territories.

But it also opens up a huge gap in birth registration. Nigeria is estimated to have an annual birth cohort of around 7 million--that's 7 million children born every year.

Only eight in every 100 of them are registered in the country, the RapidSMS database indicates. That's more than half of all children born each year unaccounted for, officially.

Across Africa, only 44 in 100 births are registered for children aged under five. That leaves 85 million children unregistered: 32 million of them are in Nigeria.

Children whose births are unregistered have "no official record of their full names, parents, place of birth, date of birth and their nationality," said Sharon Oladiji, child protection specialist at the United Nations Children's Fund in Nigeria.

"Their access to basic services is under threat; their official 'invisibility' increases their vulnerability to abuse and exploitation. In legal terms, they do not exist. Violations of their rights are going unnoticed."

Cumulative births registered as at August 2018

Where are the children

"Everything in life is about our age [for entering service, for requiring, for voting] and yet the piece of paper as evidence to this age, we don't give it," said Oladiji.

Some 190 countries have ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child. The convention obligates countries to do everything possible to protect children, ensure their survival, allow their participation and foster their development. UNICEF is the only United Nations agency named to support countries register births.

Birth registration falls under survival--and guarantees children a right to name, nationality and identity.

But a huge gap still exists between the number of children born and the number registered with an identity.

"It is not because the government doesn't want to increase registration," says Oladiji.

"It is the general malaise affecting high coverage of birth registration, lack of awareness to even see the importance of registering births. And the lack of capacity to have sufficient registrars to hand the population in the country."

NPopC is legally mandated to register birth of every child from 1992 in Nigeria

All the babies

The population far outstrips the hands to register it. The 2006 census put Nigeria's population at 140 million. In 15 years, the population estimate shot up to 180 million.

"That's more 40 million people, and they were all babies," says Oladiji.

"There have never been sufficient registrars to deal with the number. That's why we are having challenges.'

The RapidSMS monitors birth registration across all 774 council areas. It comes after the NPopC began mandatory birth registration since 1992.

More than 3,000 registrars are collating registration of children from some 7,000 health centres.

But children aged under five routinely get health services from more than 25,000 health centres, leaving millions uncovered.

Having those children on record is important to their future and that of the country.

"All our policy decision, all developmental strategies are based on the availability and use of data," says Sunday Matthew, head of civil registration and vital statistics (CRVS) at the National Population Commission in the Federal Capital Territory.

CRVS is a main source of data for national planning.

"We don't have data about our children, their age. How do we plan for their education, health care, employment in future. If we know the number of children born today, in the next five years, we will know the number of children that will enrol for school and as such we will be able to plan ahead for the classrooms that they will, the number of teachers," says Matthew.

"It is not like it absolutely unavailable, but we are not where we want to be--where every Nigerian child born on Nigerian soil should be registered."

The target was to have 100% coverage by 2015. Three years after the target year, the coverage is 35%.

Births registered in August 2018

Loose control

Many Nigerians have their births documented on hospital letterheads, in church records and local government council certificates. Many more are yet to understand the NPopC is currently responsible for birth registration, and not just census. It also registers deaths and stillbirths.



"The people are supposed to come to us for these birth certificates, but they don't come. That's the major challenge," says Francis Fadairo, director of NPopC in Ekiti state.

"Sometimes when we even go to them, it takes the grace of God for them to allow us or attend to us."

Despite controversy that has trailed Nigeria's immunisation programme, parents welcome and understand immunisation more than they do birth registration.

"That's because it [birth registration] is free. And the sanctions attached to not registering are not implemented," says Fadairo.

Nigerians are yet to come to terms with the usefulness of a birth registration as a legal identity.

"Many people are not even aware of the usefulness of a birth certificate," says Matthew.

"Most time it is not something of immediate use. People believe they will get it when they need."

That, and NPopC having just above 3,000 registrars to handle a cohort of seven million estimated births each year and having to work within financial constraints makes it arduous.

Instead it is striking memorandums with health and education sectors to reach more children.

Health sector provides two batches of maternal, newborn and child health weeks each year. Education sector pushes enrolment of children in school NPopC rides on the back of both by integrating birth registration into the services the other sectors deliver.

"Those sectors reach the hard-to-reach areas, so we have decided to ride on their back," says Matthew.

With school enrolment and the maternal, newborn and child health week, birth registrations rise. But many more children remain missing.




Oshun doesn't play when she is angry! There are alot of righteous warriors around the world upset. Some of them are priestess with great powers.

Return to righteousness for you can not go to war against God!

5g is the Apocalypse which means to uncover to reveal

Re: Black Rome: 32 Million Nigerian Children Missing! by Newcreature2020(m): 4:05pm On Jun 15, 2020
Elo is no longer missing

1 Like

Re: Black Rome: 32 Million Nigerian Children Missing! by Armypolicecults: 4:07pm On Jun 15, 2020
[quote author=Newcreature2020 post=90699470]Elo is no longer missing[/quote

Is it confirmed?

There are alot of missing babies I will change the photo.
Re: Black Rome: 32 Million Nigerian Children Missing! by Enoch07: 4:08pm On Jun 15, 2020
insightful!!

1 Like

Re: Black Rome: 32 Million Nigerian Children Missing! by Armypolicecults: 4:11pm On Jun 15, 2020
22,000 Nigerians missing since Boko Haram crisis began: Red Cross. ... In a statement, ICRC President Peter Maurer said nearly 60 percent of thosemissing were children and that it was the highest number of missing persons registered with the organisation in any country.


Lots of people missing including children.

Kill those terrorists and bring the soldiers back to find these poor souls.

Save your strength
Re: Black Rome: 32 Million Nigerian Children Missing! by Newcreature2020(m): 4:20pm On Jun 15, 2020
[quote author=Armypolicecults post=90699548][/quote]

Yes bro

1 Like

Re: Black Rome: 32 Million Nigerian Children Missing! by Armypolicecults: 4:21pm On Jun 15, 2020
Newcreature2020:



Yes bro


We must return to righteousness because we need help to stamp out wickedness.

Name them devils or suffer the wrath of change
Re: Black Rome: 32 Million Nigerian Children Missing! by Armypolicecults: 4:50pm On Jun 15, 2020
5g is the Apocalypse which means to uncover to reveal
Re: Black Rome: 32 Million Nigerian Children Missing! by Armypolicecults: 5:21pm On Jun 15, 2020
Bring home the missing soon and pray for the lost.
Re: Black Rome: 32 Million Nigerian Children Missing! by Armypolicecults: 6:13pm On Jun 15, 2020
Today affords me another opportunity to re-affirm our Administration’s commitment to the protection of children, a day to reflect on our roles and responsibilities as Parents and Leaders towards our children, and also assessing how far we have fared in this regard.

As you may recall, one of the cardinal objectives of this Administration is the provision of quality education to our children as a fundamental foundation of economic and social development. In this regard, I am pleased to inform you that this Administration has recorded measurable success in the home grown school feeding programme as it has continued to expand.

Our children are our future, and the initiatives that come from them give confidence that our country has a bright future.

I am always inspired and encouraged when I remember encounters I had with three of our young ones. When I was on medical vacation in 2017, three year old Maya Jammal recorded a prayer for my recovery, which went viral online.

Also, 10 year old Aisha Aliyu Gebbi wrote a personal letter to me, describing herself as my “biggest fan”.

Nicole Benson, then 12 years old, had contributed the sum of Five Thousand, Seven Hundred Naira and Eighty-Five kobo (N5,700.85) to my campaign in 2015. The money was all saved up from her lunch and pocket allowance. There are millions of such children nationwide.

I am very impressed by what our children have been able to do, and what the future holds for them. That is one reason why we are committed to the school feeding programme, to prepare a future generation of physically and intellectually robust children. At the last count, over 8.2 million children in 24 states of the Federation are being given free meals daily. This happens in 45,000 schools round the country.

I therefore call on all stakeholders to support this programme to ensure that all the 36 States of the Federation and FCT are covered. This will promote substantially higher enrolment levels in our schools.

Since its inception in May, 2015, this Administration has also focused attention on addressing issues of child protection, participation and survival. In 2015, the campaign to end violence against children was launched which was commemorated in 2016. In November 2016, the Campaign to End Child Marriage was also launched to ensure that as many children as possible are able to fully enjoy their childhood and be protected from all the challenges associated with this phenomenon. These campaigns have been reinforced with sensitization campaigns in some States of the Federation.

The theme for this year’s celebration “Creating Safe Spaces for Children: Our Collective Responsibility” is an opportunity to promote the safety and security of our children. As a responsible Government, we are committed to ensuring that children are protected from violence and exploitation against them, and, that their environments are safe enough for them to pursue their educational attainments, discover their full potentials to grow into responsible citizens.

This Administration has made giant strides in the protection of the Rights of the Nigerian Child and as a result of such efforts, Nigeria has been declared a Pathfinding Country on Ending Violence Against Children. This I believe is a collective achievement and I urge us to continue to build on the present momentum to achieve the targets of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

In our efforts to protect our children from abuse, exploitation and trafficking as well as provide safe, non-violent inclusive and effective learning environment in our schools, this Administration has directed the management of all Federal Government Colleges and advised all state owned schools across the Country to provide adequate measures of safety and security of their students. I again call on all schools management committees at all levels of public and private institutions to take adequate security measures and put in place mechanisms for safety of children.

May I therefore call on the Families, Security Agencies, Traditional Rulers, Religious Leaders, Civil Society Organizations, Human Rights Activists, and the Society at large to rise up and take urgent and decisive actions to stem the unacceptable rising cases of violence against our children. We must ensure safety of our children in homes, schools, markets, worship centres, on the streets and everywhere at all times.

Furthermore let me use this medium to appeal to parents not to relent in their efforts to send their wards to school, especially the girl child as her education reduces infant and maternal mortality and prevents early and child marriages. It also increases literacy and reduces poverty. The saying that to educate a woman is to educate the nation is very apt in this regard.

Finally, while I appreciate the security agencies for their efforts so far, I urge them to redouble their efforts in protecting children from danger and violence in line with the provisions of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and Child Rights Acts, 2003.

Once again, happy Children’s Day.

See More Photos Here
��� http://9japosh.com/2018/05/27/full-text-of-president-buharis-children-day-message-photos/



I remembered this speech and so must you!


Stay committed to the cleansing of Africa and Black people as a whole.

Re: Black Rome: 32 Million Nigerian Children Missing! by Armypolicecults: 8:56pm On Jun 15, 2020
Save your strength
Re: Black Rome: 32 Million Nigerian Children Missing! by Armypolicecults: 11:10pm On Jun 15, 2020
Black Rome
Re: Black Rome: 32 Million Nigerian Children Missing! by Armypolicecults: 11:27am On Jun 16, 2020
32 million missing children

Where is the army and police?

Re: Black Rome: 32 Million Nigerian Children Missing! by Armypolicecults: 11:47am On Jun 22, 2020
Name them devils or suffer the wrath of change

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