Northern Nigerian Breaking News

‘Offenders will be prosecuted’ – Kano vows tough action against sexual harassment in schools

By Uzair Adam and Rabi’at Uthman

The Kano State Government has vowed to take decisive action against any teacher or school staff found guilty of sexually harassing students, declaring that such offenders will face the full wrath of the law.

The statement was made on Tuesday by the Senior Special Assistant to Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf on Student Matters, Ibrahim Ma’ajiyi Sumaila, during a high-level stakeholders meeting organised by the Centre for Awareness on Justice and Accountability (CAJA) on ways to address the alarming prevalence of sexual harassment in educational institutions.

Sumaila stated that, “As an Islamic state, Kano will not fold its arms and watch our daughters suffer abuse and humiliation. Any teacher who dares to violate a student will be flushed out and prosecuted without delay.

Read Also:Open Contracting Portals: From transparency tools to forgotten promises in Kano

elsamad new

Sumaila expressed the state government’s support for NGOs leading advocacy and reform in the sector.

SolaceBase reports that the event, which brought together students and media professionals among others, marks the launch of a six-month project by CAJA aimed at curbing sexual harassment through strategic policy-making at the institutional level.

Good Governance Award

On his part, CAJA Executive Director, Kabiru Sa’id Dakata, said the initiative is targeted at developing internal policies in tertiary and secondary schools, stressing that most institutions either have no clear sexual harassment policy or bury such issues in vague student handbooks.

“We worked for three years pushing for a national law on sexual harassment, but it’s a tedious process.

Subscribe to our newsletter

“Now, we are going for the low-hanging fruit—pushing individual institutions to adopt clear, stand-alone policies,” Dakata said.

Read Also:Varsity sacks 3 lecturers over sexual harassment

He lamented that many victims suffer in silence, with some dropping out or failing courses because they refuse to yield to the demands of predatory lecturers.

“Students don’t even know where to report or who to turn to when harassed. That’s a failure of the system,” he added.

Barrister Maryam Ahmad Abubakar, who delivered a paper on understanding sexual harassment in academic settings, described the act as any unwelcome sexual behaviour—verbal, physical, or psychological—that creates a hostile learning environment.

Read Also:Varsity sacks 4 lecturers over sexual harassment, exam misconduct

She emphasised the need to enlighten both staff and students on boundaries, citing the importance of moral and religious teachings in reducing such cases.

Among the proposed strategies were: enforcing strict penalties, revising admission and employment ages, and integrating moral instruction into general studies curricula.

CAJA, with support from the Nigerian Women’s Trust Fund and other partners, also plans to empower survivors as advocates, conduct advocacy in selected schools, and produce campaign materials to raise awareness.

Comments are closed.