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Hafsat Abiola-Costello
is the founder of the Kudirat Initiative for Democracy (KIND), a
non-governmental organization working to promote women's leadership and raise
awareness about domestic violence
Her mother was assassinated, her father
died in prison after being jailed by the military. Today, Hafsat Abiola is one
of the most prominent civil rights activists in Nigeria, fueled by a desire to
ensure her parents' deaths were not in vain.
The daughter of Nigerian politician and
philanthropist Moshood Kashimawo Olawale (MKO) Abiola, Hafsat was at her second
year studying at Harvard, United States, when her father was sent to prison by
Nigeria's junta after claiming the country's 1993 presidential election.
Although MKO Abiola garnered almost 60%
of the vote, the West African country's military rulers annulled the results
and eventually charged the former businessman with treason. His imprisonment
prompted a wave of demonstrations, led partly by Hafsat's mother and Abiola's
second wife, Kudirat.
In 1996, Kudirat Abiola was shot in the
head when the car she was traveling in was attacked on a Lagos expressway.
Hafsat was still in the United States with her siblings when news came of her
mother's assassination.
"All five of us were in the U.S.
when we heard, and we stood in a circle, and we held hands," remembers
Hafsat. "We just stood there, and then I said to my siblings that we won't
let her down, and really since that time we've been trying to make sure that we
do not let her down."
Two years later, in
July 1998, MKO Abiola died while still in custody. Everything Hafsat has done
ever since is done through the prism of her loss and her desire to continue the
legacy left by her parents.
After Kudirat's assassination, Hafsat
founded an NGO in her mother's memory, the Kudirat Initiative for Democracy (KIND),
a group working to strengthen Nigeria's civil society.
Along with promoting female leadership
by offering training and support to women who want to run for office and be
active in public life, KIND is also tackling issues such as violence against
women.
"We wanted to also work with
protecting women from domestic violence, raising awareness about the issue of
domestic violence," says Hafsat. "Also, we're drawing tacit public
acceptance of it. If the public challenges people who abuse their wives, their
daughters, their sisters, their girlfriends, it will stop, it will be not so
easy to continue."
Last year, Hafsat was appointed as a
special adviser to the governor of Ogun State, Ibikunle Amonson. Hafsat runs a
conditional cash transfer project for the state, where poor pregnant women are
encouraged to use available healthcare facilities for safer pregnancies in a
bid to reduce maternal mortality rates.
According to the World Health
Organization, maternal mortality in Nigeria is 630 per 100,000, more than 20
times as high as in Europe or the United States.
"We need to drive the women into
our primary health centers," says Hafsat, explaining that many pregnant
women choose to not visit a doctor due to high costs.
"But for us the cost of their loss
of life is too high for us and society to bear, so we have to incentivize them
to overlook the cost," she says.
"So what we're doing is that we
pay them to go to the doctor six times before delivery, which is a lot of times
but we want to have enough time to be checking if there's any complications
arising that we have to prepare for.
"We pay them to deliver in the
hospital, so each time they go to give birth we give them a small amount of
money. It's not a lot, but it will cover transportation and a little bit
extra."
Hafsat says that through her efforts
and those of others in the country, the work of her parents can reach a new
generation of Nigerians.
"I think that if they were to do
it all over again, they would do it exactly the same way," says Hafsat of
her parents. "Or if not, they would even make more sacrifices because I
think we only live once, and we must do what we can."
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Informed commentaries, news and progressive analysis of topical events in Nigeria, Africa and around the world
Monday, 31 December 2012
Hafsat Abiola: Nigerian activist keeps family legacy alive
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