Editorial
The Girl-Child And Current Challenges
The International Day of the Girl-Child is a
United Nations Observance held annually
on October 11 to promote girls’ rights and highlight gender inequalities that exist between the sexes. But even more is the vulnerabilities that threaten the very survival of the girl-child.
The day provides opportunity for people and organizations to raise public awareness on the different types of discrimination and abuses that are inflicted on the girl-child around the globe. It is also hoped that solutions will be found, even as the average person understands the avoidable danger girls face.
The 2015 celebration with the theme: “The Power of the Adolescent Girl: Vision for 2030” was programmed to deliberately re-enforce steps taken to advance the interest of the girl-child against the backdrop of the prevailing discrimination and violence against girls and violations of their human rights.
While The Tide salutes the United Nations for observing the day, the idea of attaching the challenge of the girl-child to a global vision framework is rather disturbing. The fact is that the subject has assumed an emergency proportion and should be so treated now. Waiting for years to achieve such goals can be too clostly.
It is obvious that the girl-child all over the world is particularly vulnerable to certain human rights violations and therefore requires urgent domestication of additional protective legislations that will effectively check existing dehumanising factors in the civil, political, economic, social and cultural laws working against the interest of girls.
Today, the girl-child faces severe discrimination and abuses based on gender, age, race, colour, language, religion and ethnicity. Society pays less attention to her standard of living adequate for her intellectual, physical, moral and spiritual development.
No healthcare programme is designed to take care of the peculiar needs of the girl-child, she is exposed to unsafe environment. The girl-child is often subjected to various degrees of cultural practices, customs and traditions harmful to the child, including female genital mutilation, sexual exploitation and trafficking. She is also forced into early marriage to persons older than her grand parents.
The plight of the girl-child is nothing but a return to primitivity. It is the failing of the family, the society, the religious bodies and governments at all levels. If society cannot protect the weakest member of the population, the State of nature takes place, where only the strong survives.
But this must change because the girl-child is the one that grows and becomes the mother that carries and gives birth to all. They nurtured and sacrificed so much for life. If we allow them to be broken so early, the consequences can be huge.
Although, the Ministry of Women Affairs is expected to champion this cause, the plight of the girl-child is getting out of hands. The special need for education and medicare still falls short. The tendency to prey on them is on the rise and society appears not to notice.
The Tide thinks that the time has come when society must take responsibility for the girl-child and help build a saner society. Preventing the girl-child from abuses must be considered a high priority, and detailed laws and policies put in place to address it.
Different jurisdictions should develop their own definitions of what constitutes girl-child abuse and discrimination for the purposes of removing predicaments of the girl-child. In fact, the authorities must stop demonising sex and undertake early sex education with a view to demystifying it.
All forms of failure to act on the part of parents, organizations and governments that could result in death, serious physical or emotional harm, sexual abuse or exploitation must be avoided. Also, the girls must be allowed to grow among boys, especially, in co-educational institutions and provide the needed commonality among the sexes.
If the world can afford to give lip-service to human challenges, the burdens of the girl-child should not be treated as usual. It is a matter that cannot be left in the hands of government because to the extent government can go, the cultural, religious and social authorities should support and not otherwise.
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Editorial
Addressing Unruly Behaviours At The Airports

It began as a seemingly minor in- flight disagreement. Comfort Emmason, a passenger on an Ibom Air flight from Uyo to Lagos, reportedly failed to switch off her mobile phone when instructed by the cabin crew. What should have been a routine enforcement of safety regulations spiralled into a physical confrontation, sparking a national debate on the limits of airline authority and the rights of passengers.
The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) wasted no time in condemning the treatment meted out to Emmason. In a strongly worded statement, the body described the incident as “a flagrant violation of her fundamental human rights” and called for a thorough investigation into the conduct of the airline staff. The NBA stressed that while passengers must adhere to safety rules, such compliance should never be extracted through intimidation, violence, or humiliation.
Following the altercation, Emmason found herself arraigned before a Magistrate’s Court and remanded at Kirikiri Maximum Security Prison, a location more commonly associated with hardened criminals than with errant passengers. In a surprising turn of events, the Federal Government later dropped all charges against her, citing “overriding public interest” and concerns about due process.
Compounding her woes, Ibom Air initially imposed a lifetime ban preventing her from boarding its aircraft. That ban has now been lifted, following mounting public pressure and calls from rights groups for a more measured approach. The reversal has been welcomed by many as a step towards restoring fairness and proportionality in handling such disputes.
While her refusal to comply with crew instructions was undeniably inappropriate, questions linger about whether the punishment fit the offence. Was the swift escalation from verbal reminder to physical ejection a proportionate response, or an abuse of authority? The incident has reignited debate over how airlines balance safety enforcement with respect for passenger rights.
The Tide unequivocally condemns the brutal and degrading treatment the young Nigerian woman received from the airline’s staff. No regulation, however vital, justifies the use of physical force or the public shaming of a passenger. Such behaviour is antithetical to the principles of customer service, human dignity, and the rule of law.
Emmason’s own defiance warrants reproach. Cabin crew instructions, especially during boarding or take-off preparations, are not mere suggestions; they are safety mandates. Reports suggest she may have been unable to comply because of a malfunctioning power button on her device, but even so, she could have communicated this clearly to the crew. Rules exist to safeguard everyone on board, and passengers must treat them with due seriousness.
Nigerians, whether flying domestically or abroad, would do well to internalise the importance of orderliness in public spaces. Adherence to instructions, patience in queues, and courteous engagement with officials are hallmarks of civilised society. Disregard for these norms not only undermines safety but also projects a damaging image of the nation to the wider world.
The Emmason affair is not an isolated case. Former Edo State Governor and current Senator, Adams Oshiomhole, once found himself grounded after arriving late for an Air Peace flight. Witnesses alleged that he assaulted airline staff and ordered the closure of the terminal’s main entrance. This is hardly the conduct expected of a statesman.
More recently, a Nollywood-worthy episode unfolded at Abuja’s Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, involving Fuji icon “King”, Wasiu Ayinde Marshal, popularly known as KWAM1. In a viral video, he was seen exchanging heated words with officials after being prevented from boarding an aircraft.
Events took a dangerous turn when the aircraft, moving at near take-off speed, nearly clipped the 68-year-old musician’s head with its wing. Such an occurrence points to a serious breach of airport safety protocols, raising uncomfortable questions about operational discipline at Nigeria’s gateways.
According to accounts circulating online, Wasiu had attempted to board an aircraft while he was carrying an alcoholic drink and refused to relinquish it when challenged. His refusal led to de-boarding, after which the Aviation Minister, Festus Keyamo, imposed a six-month “no-fly” ban, citing “unacceptable” conduct.
It is deeply concerning that individuals of such prominence, including Emmason’s pilot adversary, whose careers have exposed them to some of the most disciplined aviation environments in the world, should exhibit conduct that diminishes the nation’s reputation. True leadership, whether in politics, culture, or professional life, calls for restraint and decorum, all the more when exercised under public scrutiny.
Most egregiously, in Emmason’s case, reports that she was forcibly stripped in public and filmed for online circulation are deeply disturbing. This was an act of humiliation and a gross invasion of privacy, violating her right to dignity and falling short of the standards expected in modern aviation. No person, regardless of the circumstances, should be subjected to such degrading treatment.
Ibom Air must ensure its staff are trained to treat passengers with proper decorum at all times. If Emmason had broken the law, security personnel could have been called in to handle the matter lawfully. Instead, her ordeal turned into a public spectacle. Those responsible for assaulting her should face prosecution, and the airline should be compelled to compensate her. Emmason, for her part, should pursue legal redress to reinforce the principle that justice and civility must prevail in Nigeria’s skies.
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