Nigeria: Teachers trade sex for grades
Katherine Houreld:
When Nigeria's education minister faced an audience of 1,000 schoolchildren, she expected to hear complaints of crowded classrooms and lack of equipment. Instead, girl after girl spoke up about being pressured for sex by teachers in exchange for better grades. One girl was just 11 years old.
"I was shocked," said the minister, Obiageli Ezekwesili, who has several children herself. "I asked — was it that prevalent? And they all chorused 'yes.' "
For years, sexual harassment has been rampant in Nigeria's universities, but until recently very little was done about it. From interviews with officials and 12 female college students, a pattern emerges of women being held back and denied passing grades for rebuffing teachers' advances, and of being advised by other teachers to give in quietly.
The problem has spread into schools, says Ezekwesili, and there are signs the government is finally intervening. Now that harassment even features in a song by a popular Nigerian musician, Eedris Abdulkareem, it is almost impossible to ignore.
"Mr. Lecturer, come get it on with me," croons a young girl in the song. "I'm gonna rub your back and your potbelly, make you pass my paper." With a deep chuckle, Abdulkareem replies, "Come into my office."
Most victims are college students such as Chioma, a quiet 22-year-old with a B average, who repeatedly failed political science after refusing her teacher's explicit demands for sex. She said he was a pastor old enough to be her grandfather.
"Now it has been two years and everyone else has graduated," she said. She is desperate to finish her studies and begin working to help support her family, yet "my life is stopped," she said.
Chioma and others who spoke to The Associated Press asked that their surnames be withheld. All said they and several close friends had been harassed. Stigma prevents many more from speaking out, says Oluyemisi Obilade, a professor who teaches adult education at prestigious Obafemi Awolowo University at Ile-Ife.
Like many Nigerian universities, the seemingly peaceful campus with its flame trees and soaring art-deco architecture has witnessed horrifying sexual assaults. After a student was gang-raped nine years ago, Obilade formed WARSHE — Women Against Rape, Sexual Harassment and Exploitation.
Obilade estimates she has helped hundreds of female students — and the odd male — who have been attacked by students or harassed by lecturers. Students have been raped in libraries, reading rooms and their own dorms, she says. "Some lecturers see young girls as fringe benefits," she says. "We've had cases where the girls have complained and the heads of their department have called them and said, 'Give him what he wants.' "
Mayowa, 20, a student, said six of her friends are having problems and none has sought help. "It's tough to fight," she said. "Sometimes you just have to give in."
In a recent survey carried out by a graduate student and paid for by WARSHE, 80 percent of 300 women questioned at four universities said sexual harassment was their top concern.
But with a strong African tradition of respecting one's elders, families or teachers, harassed students can rarely expect support, even when repeated complaints are made against one individual.
Harassment is commonplace in schools and colleges in many African countries, says Miriam Jato, a senior adviser to UNFPA, the U.N. agency that deals with gender issues. She says dodging teachers' advances consumes a girl's school years.
"In some rural areas, parents withdraw girls from schools when they reach a certain age because they are afraid they will have to have relations with teachers."
Nigerian students held to ransom for grades
2 Comments:
It seems to be the other way around in this country. There was another teacher here in NJ who was alleged to have been sleeping with one of her students. In any case, I love it when the press says how scarred and terrible it is for these high school guys to have slept with some hot teacher. God, I wish I was taken advantage of like that back in High School. In fact, I'll settle for it now!
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/0803052teach1.html
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/0628042teach1.html
Oh, the horror!
This isn't anything new, appalling as it still is. It's so commomplace these days it's ridiculous. I have a younger sister in uni in Nigeria and I'm always worried about her being taken advantage of, because most of the time the deciding factor to whether or not you graduate depends on what the teacher can get from you - if it isn't money or clothes bought from England or America, the only other thing left is sex.
You could be the best student in the class but if a teacher decided he like you and you spurn his advances, you're pretty stuck. Guys don't tend to face the same sort of dilemma but they often have to fork out large amounts of money in bribes. Why is this happening? Something to do with being in a position of power and abusing it, and not being paid enough.
Post a Comment
<< Home