Nigerian Feminist Forum laments fuel hardship, says it worsens plight of women, girls

Fuel station

Feminist Forum says the lack of petroleum products to power street lights exposed women and girls to rapists and urchins

Nigerian Feminist Forum (NFF) has raised alarm over the hardship faced by women and girls as a result of fuel scarcity across the country.

NFF Communications Officer, Angela Nkwo. in a statement. called on the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to resolve the fuel scarcity which has lingered for almost a month. 

The statement is tagged “Save Nigerian women and girls from hardship, resolve fuel scarcity now”.

The Feminist Forum called on the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) to ensure petroleum products are sold at approved prices nationwide, and penalties for hoarders and those who sold above approved prices of the product.

According to NFF, the scarcity has exposed Nigerian women and girls to violence as miscreants have capitalised on it to snatch phones and rob people of possessions while on long queues.

The group lamented that if the situation was not checked, it will force thousands of Nigerian women out of business because of rising inflation that will consume their capital and run them out of business.

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The Feminist Forum maintained that lack of petroleum products to power street lights exposed women and girls to rapists and urchins who hide behind the cover of darkness to perpetrate harm, and cause them untold psychological, mental, health, and physical trauma.

The NFF said “We restate that the safety of over 140million women and girls hangs on the availability of fuel for their businesses to run effectively and save us from endless domestic violence within our supposed safe spaces”, even as they called for urgent and proactive steps to address the scarcity.

The Feminist Forum said for about a month running, Nigerians in different parts of the country had been grappling with fuel scarcity even as there were no concrete efforts to address the concerns.

While they called for the prosecution of everyone connected to the importation of adulterated fuel, the group called on the Consumer Protection Council (CPC) to check the prices of foodstuff and services to save Nigerian women and girls from exorbitant prices by greedy business people.   

According to NFF, fuel played a major role in the country especially in the face of epileptic power supply which has made business owners resort to it as primary instead of alternative power supply, saying they were alarmed at the growing hardship meted out against women and girls over the scarcity.  

It noted that petroleum products were used in a variety of activities ranging from production, mobility, cooking, electricity, supply, sources of foreign exchange, saying it played a tremendous role in the lives of every citizen and the country as a whole.

The Feminist Forum stated that the scarcity had resulted in astronomical transportation costs especially for female traders who transverse the different parts of this country to buy foodstuff and other household items, saying the economic implication is increased cost of living.

According to NFF, if not addressed immediately, the fuel scarcity will result in hunger and starvation as “the prices of cooking gas, kerosene, coal has quadrupled and we are worried they may increase way above our reach, which may subject us to hunger and starvation”.

NFF stated that the number of women and girls exposed to spousal violence and other forms of gender-based violence had increased within one-month because after spending long hours on fuel queues, husbands return home to display their frustration on them and other family members.

Further, the group said their wards and members who were students in different tertiary institutions were unable to afford the high transportation costs as they head home to observe the one-month warning strike declared by the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).  

Ishaya Ibrahim:
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