Opinion
Towards Sustaining The G-Win Initiative
The concept of G-Win
Program, a Girls and Women Initiative in Nigeria, was designed 3 yrs ago. Its implementation was first carried out to give life changing opportunities for girls and women in diverse areas.
The Minister of Water Resources, Mrs Serah Ochekpe, during the official flag-off of this programme in Umuahia last year, had said that the programme was initiated to address the distorted distribution of the nation’s resources and opportunities which currently placed girls and women at a disadvantaged position.
She also said that the programme would help realize the potentials inherent in the average girl and woman in Nigeria to substantially contribute to the overall growth and development of the communities and country at large.
Going by the water minister’s explanation, the G-Win project from the perspective of her ministry, would create employment and wealth through the provision of water, kiosks and public sanitation facilities while enhancing the capacity of women and girls to take ownership of the facilities.
The programme no doubt, underscores the federal government’s determination to raise the standard of women in the country. It is aimed at building capacities of rural women and girls in Nigeria to become leaders in management of their respective choice of endeavours.
The federal government chose four states out of the 36 states and the federal capital city for a pilot project.
This smacks of the government’s readiness to do well that which is worth doing at all. The four states which include Abia, Bauchi, Osun and Plateau will surely serve as a control experiment from where findings will be used as a raw data in the administration of the restates.
To ensure effective implementation of the G-Win project five ministries viz Water Resources, Agriculture, Works, Communication and Health were selected as pilot implementing agencies which were expected to integrate the G-Win concept into the mandate of their respective ministries.
The implementing agencies are basically to look out for innovative approaches to reach out to the indigent girls and women by enhancing the already existing opportunities and opening more to support and increase the number of girls and women gainfully employed in the sector.
According to the federal ministry of water resources, making women leaders in water management, provision of water and sanitation facilities in public places as well as improving the hygienic condition of the rural population is a task that must be done.
This, the ministry had demonstrated by engaging the service of Women Environmental Programme (WEP), an NGO with United Nations ECOSDC Consultative Status observer status to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and observer status to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), which has since trained over 20 rural women and girls in the four project pilot states of Abia, Bauchi, Plateau and Osun, on community-led total sanitation, (CLTS) leadership and conflict resolution, slab construction and facility maintenance.
For Mike Onolememen of the federal works ministry, fifty professional women have been slated for training on public procurement, five rural women on small items public procurement and entrepreneurial skills as well as two hundred and fifty rural women on road maintenance basic techniques and entrepreneurial skills with about 10 per cent of its contracts set aside for the selected fifty professional women upon successful completion of trainings as indicated by the permanent secretary of the ministry.
It is glaring that if the training programme is sustained, the G-Win Programme would definitely impact positively on the socio-economic lives of the beneficiaries and also afford them the opportunity to have a voice in the building of a better tomorrow.
Onolememen no doubt stated rightly when he said that G-Win, as part of the federal government’s transformation agenda seeks to give a voice to mothers, sisters, and daughters who have hitherto, been deprived of access to desired aspirations.
As I watched from the comfort of my house, the televised inaugural launch of the G-Win programme in Abuja a couple of days ago, I did not need any deviner to engage me in any expository as to the genuine intention of the federal government of Nigeria coupled with its determination to change the hitherto ugly history of the rural girls and women.
Testimonies from the initial beneficiaries attest to the fact that the rural girls and women definitely have abundant inept potentials waiting to be harnessed. Little wonder when no effort is made at this direction, the wrong option is rather solicited by way of making themselves relevant the wrong way.
The G-Win project if well executed has the potential of making the girls and women relevant and resourceful anywhere they are found.
However, the G-Win programme may not have been the first life changing initiative executed by administrations of government, at first it is usually a welcome development, facilitators most often put in their best at the onset only to relent along the line perhaps due to the inability of the government to sustain its own part of the bargain or the trainees (beneficiaries) failure to judiciously use available materials for the purpose they were intended.
Otherwise, the G-Win programme is not different from series of skills acquisition programmes organised in different states at different times by some first ladies and public-spirited individuals in the society. The mentality that it is my own turn to cut my “own share of the national cake” had always been the bane of our progress in this direction.
Thanks to God that beneficiaries of the pilot project of this initiative had exhibited what they were able to achieve through the initiative. The news of their achievement can be published beyond the streets of Ashekelon if these beneficiaries can be substantively established from where they can impact the world around them and make the desired and expected difference which the programme was designed to achieve.
Apart from the states and local government that have benefitted in the pilot project, we must not lose light of the fact that other states are already salivating if the project succeed in the states so experimented, all things being equal, it will also succeed in these other remaining states.
Remember, what is good for the geese is also good for the gander.
Sylvia ThankGod-Amadi
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