Donated Books Surpass Initial Target of 1000 Books
Dear Family, Friends and Supporters,
Thank you so much for your donations received so far!
We are proud to say we have surpassed the initial book donation target of 1,000 books … we now have a total of 1,191 books :)! And guess what? Families are still donating more books.
Also, we’ve raised over £1000.00 within a month of our campaign … This is awesome!!! Thank you very much :).
But, we still need you to spread the word. Tell your families, friends, colleagues at work and more.
We need more money to enable us to reach our beneficiaries and deliver a heartfelt impactful project.
Every financial donation you make, less the Go Fund Me Fees of 7.9%, will go towards the ‘Book Drive Nigeria 2017’.
We are keeping records of all your donations and will give you a full report of how your money is spent and its impact on the beneficiaries.
We love you for donating.
Much appreciated,
Tokunbo and the Team
Books and DVDs – Donations from a Childhood Friend…
Dear Family, Friends and Supporters,
More good news!
In the words of the famous singer Dionne Warwick … “Keep shining, keep smiling, knowing you can always count on me … that’s what friends are for”!
It feels so good when childhood friends want the best for you :). Such is my story … my childhood friend just donated an additional 52 books and 22 DVDs towards our Book Drive Nigeria 2017. I was most definitely pleased to receive the items from her family!
We are truly excited and can’t wait to see the happy faces of our beneficiaries.
As promised, we will keep you informed of every step of the Book Drive Nigeria 2017 journey.
Much appreciated,
Toks and the Team
Nigerians in Nigeria are Donating Books as well…
Dear Family, Friends, and Supporters,
Fantastic News!
More books have been delivered to us for the Book Drive Nigeria 2017 all the way from Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria. The books totaling 128 are a welcome addition to our growing donations.
Thank you very much to our donor! We are thrilled to have donations coming from another State as our campaign gets bigger. Remember, we will be donating books all across schools in hard to reach communities in Nigeria.
Please keep your book and financial donations rolling in…tell everyone :).
We love you for donating!
Much appreciated,
Toks and the ChiYoWo Team
NB: See a picture of some of our team members with some of the books :).
Book Drive 2017 and Reading and Digital Literacy Skills Programme
Our Book Drive 2017 and #Reading and #Digital Literacy Skills Programme is targeted at children and young persons aged between 4 -14 years, including the under-represented girl-child. We will work with 12 schools/centres in hard to reach communities in Nigeria.
We are embedding a much-needed education awareness initiative in a country where approximately, one-quarter of students in primary schools drop out of school (World Bank). This programme is all about preparing the young to reposition their mindsets and equipping them with global tools. This is our succession plan for equipping our future leaders.
Can you imagine…
More than 10.5 million children are out of school in Nigeria (UNICEF) and Nigeria has the highest number of out of school children in the world (World Bank). In truth access and quality of education is stunted!
Impact
We believe the Book Drive 2017 and the ChiYoWo #Reading and #Digital Literacy Skills Programme will do the following for 4-14-year-olds in hard to reach communities:
1. Enhance strong literacy skills
2. Develop lifelong literacy skills
3. Improve on reading habits in controlled and designated spaces
4. Encourage school enrolment
5. Increase student retention in chosen schools and centres
6. Reduce illiteracy rates in hard to reach areas
Thank you very much for the support we have received so far and please join us in supporting our Book Drive 2017 as this will help us accomplish The ChiYoWo #Reading and #Digital Literacy Skills Programme. Let’s start driving…Shout out to friends, family and colleagues.
Monetary Donations
We are also receiving monetary donations.
Cheque: Payable to ChiYoWo – Chld Yth & Wmn Empwrt Ini
Bank in Nigeria: GT Bank
Account Number: 0223623177
Or
Visit our gofundme page to make donations: https://www.gofundme.com/help-wed-love-to-read-books-too
Much appreciated,
The ChiYoWo Family
NB: Please contact us if you would like to donate supplies in London or Nigeria. We look forward to receiving all your donations by 29th May 2017 to enable us to reach all the students before the summer holiday begins. Thanks for all your support :).
Let’s Advocate for Zero Hunger
Let’s Advocate for Zero Hunger by ChiYoWo
The Sustainable Development Goal 2 promotes zero hunger. The target is to end world hunger along with malnutrition by the year 2030. Another target is to double the agricultural productivity and income of small-scale food producers. The UN says, “It is time to rethink how we grow, share and consume our food.”
In Nigeria, there are 4.5 million that are in need of food assistance with hard to access regions like the Borno and Yobe states being considered to be in a severe food crisis, some even saying conditions are famine like. There are an estimated 244,000 children that are suffering from acute malnutrition. If treatment is not provided soon, 49,000 children are at risk of dying.
Unfortunately, hunger is becoming more and more common around the globe. Let’s take a quick look at some quick facts provided by the UN.
- Globally, one in nine people in the world today (795 million)are undernourished.
- The vast majority of the world’s hungry people live in developing countries, where 12.9 percent of the population is undernourished.
- Poor nutrition causes nearly half (45 percent) of deaths in children under five – 3.1 million children each year.
- 66 million primary school-age children attend classes hungry across the developing world, with 23 million in Africa alone.
- In sub-Saharan Africa, projections for the 2014-2016 periods indicate a rate of undernourishment of almost 23 per cent.
These horrific and alarming facts are only a brief look into what hunger is doing to people all over the globe. It is time for all of us to come together and commit to the eradication of hunger.
To get more information and the Sustainable Development Goals please visit: https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org
For information and facts about hunger as well as how you can help in the fight against hunger please visit:
https://www.unicef.org/nutrition/
https://www.un.org/zerohunger/
Sources
[1.] United Nations – http://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/hunger/ [2.] World Food Programme – https://www.wfp.org/emergencies/nigeria
- Published in BLOG
Why is Gender Equality Important?
Why is Gender Equality Important? by ChiYoWo
Every single one of us wants a peaceful, prosperous world so why is it that gender equality is still a struggle for us to achieve? Not only is gender equality a basic human right, but it lays a foundation for a more sustainable world. That is why gender equality is the 5th goal on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
Why is gender equality so important? Well, about half of our world’s population is represented by women and girls (about 3.52 billion) which mean they make up half of its potential. When issues like gender inequality persist it causes social progress to become stagnate, promotes poverty, and leaves our young girls and women without access to healthcare, education, and proper nutrition.
Quick gender equality facts provided by the UN :
- Women in Northern Africa hold less than one in five paid jobs in the non-agricultural sector. The proportion of women in paid employment outside the agriculture sector has increased from 35 percent in 1990 to 41 percent in 2015.
- In sub-Saharan Africa, girls still face barriers to entering both primary and secondary school.
- Globally, nearly 15 million girls under age 18 are married every year—or 37,000 each day.
- Worldwide, 35 percent of women have experienced physical and/or sexual intimate partner violence or non-partner sexual violence.
For our world to keep progressing, gender equality has to happen. We must harness and use the potential of our girls and women. Providing our girls and women with equal access to education, healthcare, and work will not only fuel sustainable economies, but it will also benefit all societies economically.
Some of the targets for goal five on the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals list are:
- To end all forms of discrimination against all women and girls everywhere.
- Eliminate all forms of violence against all women and girls in the public and private spheres, including trafficking and sexual and other types of exploitation.
- Eliminate all harmful practices, such as child, early and forced marriage and female genital mutilation.
- Ensure universal access to sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights as agreed in accordance with the Programme of Action of the International Conference on Population and Development and the Beijing Platform for Action and the outcome documents of their review conferences.
Please, join us in raising awareness of the importance of gender equality. Our girls and women around the world need our help.
For more information on the Sustainable Development Goals please visit: http://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/sustainable-development-goals/
Sources:
[1.] UN – http://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/gender-equality/ [2.] UN – http://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/5_Why-it-Matters_GenderEquality_2p.pdf- Published in BLOG
Our Hope for 2017 and Beyond…
Our Hope for 2017 and Beyond
By ChiYoWo
With 2016 coming to a close it is time to start thinking about the New Year and the things we want to accomplish not only for ourselves but for our children, our youth, and our women all over the world.
The people of Nigeria, especially women and children have been struck by many hardships over the years and it is time for adversity to end. It is time to have access to education, for there to be gender equality, greater access to healthcare, and for everyone to equally have the opportunity to live a happy and prosperous life.
There are many people and organizations all over the world that are making what once was a dream, a reality. Organizations such as ONE, The Nigerian Health Watch, Health Reform Foundation of Nigeria, Afri-Dev, WARDC and partners are calling on the Government of Nigeria to:
- Allocate dedicated resources to benefit all Nigerian women and girls, particularly in the poorest and the most vulnerable areas.
- Step up funding for nutrition in the 2017 budget in line with the national nutrition strategy.
- Provide additional funding of 1% of CRF promised for the Basic Care Provision Fund within the National Health Act and to do so within the 2017 budget. A call has been made to set a timetable to achieve the Abuja Declaration commitment to allocate at least 15% of the annual budget to health by the end of the term of this government in 2019.
- Ensure that states allocate the 15% to the health budget and data is made available on health budgets allocated and implemented at both the state and federal levels, to facilitate accountability to citizens.
This New Year brings new hope to the children youth and women in Nigeria. There are people listening, raising awareness, and working hard to ensure that lives and situations change for the better. It is time to make a difference.
Related Research:
ONE – https://www.one.org/africa/press/make-naija-stronger-health-campaign-launched/
- Published in ARTICLES
Youth Empowerment Twitter ‘Live’ Talk on Sustainable Development Goals
- Published in Events
The Saga of Malnutrition in Internally Displaced Camps
Malnutrition in Children in Internally Displaced Camps
In 2009 Boko Haram attacked Maiduguri the capital of Borno state and carried out a series of attacks on police stations and government buildings which led to confrontation, chaos and bloodshed on the streets. Hundreds of Boko Haram supporters were killed, and thousands of residents fled the capital.
Seven years later, this conflict is still on-going with no sign of abating any time soon. Over 15 million people affected by this conflict and within Nigeria’s borders more than 1.8 million people have been forcibly displaced. Alarmingly, 7.4 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance, with more than 50 percent being children.
These children, who are already living in precarious situations and poverty, are left with nothing. Right now, there are a quarter of a million children left severely malnourished. Malnutrition is defined as “lack of proper nutrition, caused by not having enough to eat, not eating enough of the right things, or being unable to use the food that one does eat.”
The largest attributing factor to children being malnourished is the lack of access to nutritious foods in these camps. Children are in need of an array of assorted vitamins, minerals, and micro-nutrients and without the proper type of food malnutrition occurs. When a child becomes malnourished, their body cannot even do the simplest of things such as continue to grow or fight off disease.
Currently, organizations like UNICEF, WFP, and OCHA are working hard to reach those severely malnourished children in these camps. The WFP plans on providing not only food but money as well to 1.8 million of the most vulnerable people while UNICEF is treating 133,000 severely malnourished children while providing healthcare to 3.3 million people.
There are also plans for the government to ramp up their efforts and establish an inter-ministerial response task force and appointing a Humanitarian Coordinator to liaise with the international community.
If you are looking to help these children in need there many organizations you can donate too. A few of them would be:
[1.] Vanguard – http://www.vanguardngr.com/2016/02/450-children-died-of-malnutrition-in-28-idp-camps-in-borno/ [2.] UNICEF – https://www.unicef.org/appeals/files/UNICEF_NorthEast_Nigeria_Snapshot_5_Feb__2015.pdf [3.] World Food Program – https://www.wfp.org/hunger/malnutrition [4.] UNICEF – https://www.unicef.org/appeals/nigeria.html#1 [5.] Humanitarian Response – https://www.humanitarianresponse.info/en/operations/nigeria/documents/document-type/humanitarian-programme-cycle [6.] UN OCHA – http://www.unocha.org/nigeria/about-ocha-nigeria/about-crisis
https://unocha.exposure.co/when-conflicts-starve-children
[7.] BBC News – http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-13809501
- Published in BLOG
International Day of the Girl Child in Benin, Nigeria
ChiYoWo Celebrates International Day of the Girl Child 2016 in Benin, Nigeria
Children, Youth and Women (ChiYoWo) Empowerment Initiative organized a one-day seminar to commemorate the international Day of Girl Child on 11th of October, 2016 at Discovery Schools, Benin City, Nigeria. The theme of this year’s event, “Girls’ Progress = Goals’ Progress: A Global Girl Data Movement, is a call for action for increased investment in collecting and analyzing girl-focused, girl-relevant and sex-disaggregated data, as what gets counted gets done. The Day increases awareness of issues and inequalities faced by girls around the world. To date, many global development plans do not include or consider girls, and their issues and problems become “invisible.”
The seminar helped raise awareness not only of the issues that girls face but also what is likely to happen when those problems are resolved. For instance, educating girls helps reduce the rate of child marriages, disease and helps strengthen the economy by enabling girls have access to higher paying jobs.
Onyeka Titigbe of ChiYoWo Empowerment Initiative and facilitator of the Girl Child event noted the objective of the seminar, was to empower the participants to be better leaders in the society. This was borne from the fact that the rate of girl child abuse, kidnappings and gender based violence in the society caused by culture, hunger and poverty, inadequate government policies and insurgency had been placed on the back burner for too long.
At the event Mrs. Rita Iyke-Uwaka, a forest and biodiversity officer of Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth, Nigeria, emphasized on the need for immediate action to protect the girl child and stressed educating the girl child would help to reduce dependency on others and to a large extent, help lift families out of poverty. In addition, Mr. Cadmus Enade, from the Health of Mother Earth Foundation, urged them to maintain their dignity as girls, while Mrs. Caroline Ubrei Joe stated every girl has the potential of giving birth to a generation, not just a generation but generation of impact. She also spoke on how to achieve their career goals and advised them not to be distracted by irrelevant events.
In closing the event, Chiyowo Empowerment Initiative donated a total of ten (10) copies of Ben Carson’s life changing books “Gifted Hands” and “Think Big” to 10 students who were encouraged to read and learn from the books.
ChiYoWo Empowerment Initiative is a non-profit organisation seeking to Reposition Children, Youth and Women towards Sustained Livelihoods.
- Published in Events








