Sun 18 Jul 2021 02.01 EDT
Bukola Onyishi was delighted when she found out that the British government was going to help her realise a dream in one of the poorest parts of Nigeria. With a grant agreement that was meant to last for three years, she was finally going to be able to launch a female empowerment programme for the women of Bauchi state in the countryâs north-east, many of whom had fled the militant Islamist group Boko Haram and were now living in abject poverty in camps for the internally displaced.
âThe grant made us very happy,â says Onyishi, country director for Women for Women International. â[Bauchi] was the right place to be.â Setting it up was not easy: Onyishi and her colleagues had a job to persuade community elders of the projectâs value, encountering deep-seated patriarchal beliefs that surprised even her in their obstinacy. But they came round in the end, and the first 12-month empowerment programme began, teaching 1,200 carefully selected women about everything from their basic human rights to numeracy and business skills.