Over 89 percent of children in Jigawa State are experiencing multi-dimensional poverty, with 85.6 percent living in conditions of monetary poverty.
This information was revealed by Mr. Rahama Mohammed Farah, the Chief of the UNICEF Kano Field Office, during a speech at the launch and dissemination of the Jigawa General Household Survey, which was held at the banquet hall of the Government House in Dutse.
The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) emphasized the urgent need for action from the 27 local government councils in the state to improve the lives of affected children and provide them with better opportunities for a brighter future.
The Kano UNICEF Chief Field Officer who was represented by Mr Micheal Banda said “89.4 percent of children whom experience monetary poverty as 85.6% are multi-dimensionally poor in the state”.
According to him “It is a sobering reality that 89.4% of children in the Jigawa state experience monetary poverty, while 85.6% are multi-dimensionally poor, facing deprivations in at least three critical areas, including Health, Education, Nutrition, Water Sanitation, Shelter, Access to Information, and Child Protection. These figures highlight the urgent need for collaborative action to reduce child poverty and improve the well-being of Jigawa’s children”.
He added “Together, we have achieved significant milestones, such as strengthening systems for measuring child poverty through the recent General Household Survey (GHS), developing key policies and action plans, and building the capacity of the government stakeholders”.
The chief field officer stressed that Local Government Chairmen have a pivotal role to play in shaping the discourse and actions needed especially to address child poverty in Jigawa using evidence generated for multisectoral planning.
UNICEF maintained the challenges can be addressed by strengthening collective efforts and putting in place measures that will ensure the Utilization of Local Government data to inform planning and decision-making as well as Designing and implementing of structured social protection interventions targeting poor and vulnerable children.
“Other measures are approval of the elaborated social protection policy, passage of the revised social protection bill into law, increased budgetary allocations for child-specific programming across social sectors using the available data particularly in Health, Education and Social Protection and Scaling up birth registration for children under five, with a target to increase the current rate by at least 30%”.
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