Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone - Family (6) - Nairaland
Nairaland Forum › Nairaland General › Family › Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone (24898 Views)
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by kullozone(m): 8:33am On Nov 08, 2025 |
Naustine:I live in Lagos bro. To be honest, I'm tired of the girls here... It's already End time in Lagos, I think Delta State might be better. I mean, even girls from Delta State come to learn scope and hustle in Lagos |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Opynion: 10:27am On Nov 08, 2025 |
Curious as this might seem, majority of the almajiris still have thier parent in the marriage. It is the parents that are simply unable to take care of them therefore pushed them out on the street. ......the stat did not mean children living in their parent house but those who still have their parent in marriage. |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by lailo: 10:37am On Nov 08, 2025 |
I agree with the statistic? very accurate. SW is copying western culture, that's why there is high rate of divorce. The region is losing family values to western culture. Western culture has more influence on SW than any other region. It is better to marry an hausa lady than a SW lady. The hausa lady will never contemplate leaving no matter what but a yoruba girl at slight inconvenience will pick race. I had dated an hausa lady before, so I know what I'm talking about but I missed that opportunity and I regret it. |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Prettychild(f): 10:40am On Nov 08, 2025 |
madridguy:And who are the men getting them pregnant? Those men should be held responsible |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Fejoku: 10:46am On Nov 08, 2025 |
Kobojunkie:To answer a question properly, one has to understand it clearly. The report says the percentage of children living with both parents. Both parents in this case means the same father and mother. It doesn't include a mix home of one divorcee or two divorcees. It is strictly a normal nuclear family setting. Going by this, some almajiris still tick the box because although, they maybe far away from their homes and are treated as homeless boys, it isn't really so for all of them. Some do visit their parents homes mostly polygamous but nonetheless, their own homes with both parents. Another twist is that the high divorce rate in the NW is compensated for by government sponsored marriage that pushes those divorced women into another marriage and give the new children the opportunity to stay with both parents. This helps to reduce the instances of single parenthood that is now the new norm in most liberal countries and cultures. Finally, that some kids don't live with their parents from the same home doesn't affect the stats if their siblings remain with the parents in their home. Therefore, the main focus here is based in single parenthood and high divorce rate without remarrying. Any culture where women seek so much independence through divorce and incidents of high teenage pregnancies will perform poorly in this category. |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Naustine(m): 11:46am On Nov 08, 2025 |
kullozone:LoL.. delta might be better? I have my doubts |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Richtaiwo(m): 1:23pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
DarkJeddi:Instead of facing the issues in your own backyard, you’d rather fixate on the region you love to hate. Tell me, how exactly will the so-called “Almajiri scourge” solve the epidemic of broken homes and the endless parade of single parenthood in your region? Or is that your latest miracle cure? Now, focus and read carefully. The Almajiri system is essentially a form of schooling in Northern Nigeria. The word Almajiri itself means “student.” It is a traditional method of educating children in Arabic and Islamic studies, often away from their parents, primarily due to the limited availability of qualified teachers. However, poverty has led to a widespread abuse of the system, with many parents allowing their children to fend for themselves through begging and other means. Yet, if you ask any of these Almajiris, they can usually tell you where their parents are, and in most cases, their parents live together as families. So, if parents send their children to study in schools outside their homes, such as in boarding schools, does that mean the children are no longer living with their parents? |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by DarkJeddi(m): 1:31pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
Richtaiwo:You can type all the epistle you want Ogbeni,save that for those that have not lived in the North. A school where a 4 year old is dispatched from Sokoto to Gombe without any parental care and guidance? A school where kids roam the streets with no food and shelter? A school where millions of hungry,diseases children are left to the mercy of an unforgiving world? Born throway.🫵🏽 |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Richtaiwo(m): 1:36pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
DarkJeddi:The topic is about children not living with both parents. I ask again, despite all these conditions you have enumerated, are the children contextually no longer living with their parents? Or they told you they no longer go to Sokoto to visit their parents? And if you have problem with simple comprehension, I can't provide solution. It is clearly written in the post you just quoted that there is a widespread abuse of this system, yet went ahead to enumerate instances of such abuse as a justification for the jaundiced narrative you want to push. The compilers of this report have presented their findings, go tell them they are wrong, then change the report and put what you want to hear, so the delusion continue. |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by DarkJeddi(m): 1:45pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
Richtaiwo:How is a child moved from Sokoto to Gombe and left to fend for himself living under parental care? Who caters for them whilst they wallow in neglect and hunger at their new station? Oga,I've lived in several Northern States and seen the conditions of these children and your gaslighting ain't going to work with me. Abandoning your vulnerable kids in whatever guise is still abandonment. What exactly is the difference between them and their street Urchin Southern counterparts,oh,they get to visit their parents? |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Richtaiwo(m): 1:53pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
DarkJeddi:The topic is not about receiving parental care, don't attempt changing the topic. The topic is about percentage of children not living with both parents. Are children far away from their and not getting parental care, while the parents still live as families the same as children not living with both parents as the topic says? If the parents still live together, are you now saying the children can't reach out to them? Please, stop quoting me, as I can't continue explaining simple English expression to an adult. ![]() |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Niwdog(m): 1:56pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
DarkJeddi:You don't know how the almajiris system works so I advise you to keep shut and ask |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by lawrezs: 2:30pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
The ladies from south and west because they know their rights.And too much studies . But in the north they listen to their husbands and obey them. |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Ayiba0911: 3:05pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
BlackViper: |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Ravenna: 4:38pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
ebukal67x:Don't be deceived. Alimajiri no dey for SW. |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Gerrard59(m): 4:51pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
Olamilekan1555:This is a thread on statistics. I don't understand the angle you are interested in. Everything I stated there is factual. |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Gerrard59(m): 4:54pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
lailo:That is up for debate. Except you want to use Lagos to cover the entire region. Are people in Osun and Ekiti that westernised? Are Yoruba Muslims that westernised? What is your definition of being "westernised"? BTW, what are these family values that are lacking in Yoruba women but exist in Hausa ladies (Christian or Muslims)? |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Kobojunkie: 5:27pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
Fejoku:The high divorce rates recorded in the Northern states, coupled with the death rate(death tolls due to terrorism included) make this reasoning of yours severely lacking. ![]() 2. Forcing about 1000 - 4000 women a year into marriages—against their will— each year cannot be said to adequately compensate for or erase the over 10 thousand women(including those formerly married to divorcees or widowers) who find themselves out of marriage each year. I have always known that the tradition has been an attempt to hide baby mamas in the North, but it still falls short each year in doing so. So, no, this does not explain away the errors in the numbers reported in the OP. ![]() Also, if you visit your earlier comment, you will find that children forced into these sorts of unions cannot be counted as living with same father, same mother. So, are you attempting to throw that out at this point? ![]() 3. This assertion of yours makes no sense. If 2 children are rendered homeless by their parents, what does it matter to them and their existence that a sibling of theirs has yet to be rendered homeless by the same parents? No sense at all! ![]() 4. Culture is a delusion that only makes sense when the society that holds to it is said to be thriving. Northern Nigeria has not been thriving for a long time. This clearly means the northern cultures have produced little to no benefit for the people in the north for the longest. So, let's stop trying to wave the now-useless "Our culture is better than others" flag and focus instead on the topic. ![]() |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Kobojunkie: 5:30pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
Almunjid:This epistle here is riddled with so many assumptions that are meaningless to this topic. ![]() |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by parags(m): 8:45pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
Kobojunkie:Is this about yoruba culture or igbo culture ? Your submission is not submitting . |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Kobojunkie: 8:48pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
parags:Igbo culture, of course! 🥱🥱🥱 |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by parags(m): 9:11pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
Kobojunkie:I was referring to yoruba culture ma |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Kobojunkie: 9:19pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
parags:You were? Look...it is about time you all buried that "My culture is better than yours" flag because not a single culture in that entire country respects children and women. 🥱🥱🥱 Yoruba culture is just as deplorable as igbo and Hausa culture when it comes to respecting of women's and children's rights. 🥱🥱🥱 |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by babajero(m): 9:42pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
Chachalogo:so what about the al-majirins that makes up more 55 percent of northern population? |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by lailo: 10:41pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
Gerrard59:Check it. The Igbos hold their culture at high esteem and especially in the area of marriage, same thing with most SS states. You can hardly see an Igbo woman leave her marriage no matter what. Hausa is even worse in that regards, their culture and religion have supremacy over any external influence. But u see the Yoruba people , bcs of that Lagos influence u just mentioned, the divorce sunami is spreading fast to other Yoruba states u just mentioned. Any small challenge in marriage just like the white, they are off. Go to Europe and see most of the Nigeria marriages collapsing, they are mostly yorubas. They will even send their husband they left Nigeria together to prison. Most other culture especially the Igbos and SS believe that if a woman cheat, the husband will die or the wife will develop some strange illness or all her children will die. This believe is still very much influential among the Igbos and those other minority ethnicities but the Yorubas don’t believe all that, that’s why they move from one husband house to another easily and can cheat without fear or consequences. |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by gbengaakubebe: 11:58pm On Nov 08, 2025 |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by parags(m): 2:09am On Nov 09, 2025 |
Kobojunkie:There are no perfect cultures . Culture is the way of a people . Their beliefs , philosophy and ideologies formed over a significant period of time. Usually based on social interactions , observations and experiences . On the women and children angle, do you agree with me that it has varying degrees across cultures ? Culture is dynamic. . It changes as time passes and experience changes . America did not get there overnight . It took time . Respecting the root of why a cultural norm exist is a step.towards changing it . Not by aggression . |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Kobojunkie: 2:12am On Nov 09, 2025 |
parags:No one said anything about cultures needing to be perfect. I instead made clear that absolutely none of the cultures in Nigeria respects the rights of women and children. ![]() 2. No, it does not! It is either a culture does or it does not. And none of the cultures in Nigeria respects the rights of women and children. Period! ![]() 3. That dynamic nature is what needs to be invoked at this point to ensure that respect for women and children becomes part of the culture— something that has been absent until this point. ![]() |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by Gerrard59(m): 2:33am On Nov 09, 2025 |
lailo:To be fair, though, when societies severely restrict women's economic freedom and personal safety, they don't progress in the long term. So when praising other ethnic groups for their cultural rules on their women vis-a-vis your ethnic group, think about it deeply. But u see the Yoruba people , bcs of that Lagos influence u just mentioned, the divorce sunami is spreading fast to other Yoruba states u just mentioned. Any small challenge in marriage just like the white, they are off. Go to Europe and see most of the Nigeria marriages collapsing, they are mostly yorubas. They will even send their husband they left Nigeria together to prison.Maybe mostly in the UK, where the majority of Nigerians are of the Yoruba ethnic group. Another thing is: when humans, whether men or women, get economic freedom and empowerment, they get independent, assertive and opinionated. However, when these freedoms and empowerment aren't allowed, the society overall does not progress. So, it is give and take, and there is a reason Yorubas prosper. Most other culture especially the Igbos and SS believe that if a woman cheat, the husband will die or the wife will develop some strange illness or all her children will die.The thing with this cultural belief is that those who practice it deeply don't progress. That is just the truth. BTW, don't the Yorubas have Magun? Do families who practice Magun progress faster than those who don't? The thing about cheating is multifaceted because polygamy (including taking other men's wives) thrives in Yoruba land. So, how would polygamy thrive if cheating is spiritually penalised? As for Igbos, such practices have greatly reduced because of the strong Christianity presence. This believe is still very much influential among the Igbos and those other minority ethnicities but the Yorubas don’t believe all that, that’s why they move from one husband house to another easily and can cheat without fear or consequences.I understand your angle - how to tackle the easy divorce situation and having children with different men. It is something I ponder on because while I am not in support of the cultural or diabolical means to deter such behaviours, I also concede that when women get economic freedom and independence, who many years ago did not enjoy these rights, there is an increase in divorce and cheating rates by women. It is to find a way to ensure single parenting, especially single motherhood, reduces even while women are economically empowered. To an extent, East Asian societies have done well in this aspect. The women have economic freedom, yet the rate of single motherhood is very low. The divorce rates are also very low. |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by shurdyslove(m): 7:37am On Nov 09, 2025 |
madridguy: |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by DarkJeddi(m): 8:02am On Nov 09, 2025 |
Niwdog:Ogbeni, I don't care to how lofty an Idea the system is supposed to be,that is for you and your pocket. Dress it however you want to dress it, I know hungry and abandoned children when I see one. Na people like you wey no see anything wrong in parents abandoning their kids,to suffer in a cold cruel world dey conduct all these stvpid statistics. If I may ask ,how many Saudi Arabian or Qatari kids do you see roaming about their cities in the guise of seeking knowledge? Non sense and Al Majiri. |
| Re: Percentage Of Nigerian Children Living With Both Parents By Zone by ariesbull: 7:47pm On Nov 10, 2025 |
RollinTNDA:That's why their men who are decent don't marry from their tribes they go outside their tribes ...so that they will have peace and sanity Just look at many decent men there and their rich folks... They marry outside their tribes ! They know why ! |
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