The first
daughter of a pilot from Abia State in southeast Nigeria, Nnenna Elendu-Ukeje
never faced disadvantages for being a woman until she entered politics 10 years
ago.
In
her three terms as member of parliament for Bende constituency in Abia, she has
experienced discrimination, sexual innuendoes, physical threats and
insubordination, mainly from male colleagues. But each time she fought back.
However
she is concerned that the treatment of women in politics in Nigeria, and the
threats they receive, is scaring women away with less than six percent of
Nigerian parliamentarians female.
She
said this is detrimental to women across Africa's most populous nation of 186
million people who need strong voices to fight for government policies that
affect women, such as gender violence, maternal mortality and empowerment.
"We
must have people who actually understand, who are the beneficiaries of these
policies, being part of the policy formulation," the 48-year-old single
mother told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in her office in Abuja where a
statuette of Hillary Clinton adorns her desk.
Elendu-Ukeje is one of 27 women sitting in the 108 seat Senate and 360 seat
House of Representatives since the 2015 election, from 32 in 2011.
She
suspects fewer women will participate in the 2019 elections, put off by the
violence that has marred previous votes in certain parts of Nigeria.
THREATS AND VIOLENCE
During
the last election, people started firing guns as Elendu-Ukeje was campaigning
and she was whisked away, unscathed, but some of her security personnel were
injured.
"If
there's no disincentives for the perpetrators of violence, my fear is that the
political space for women is going to continue to shrink," she said.
Elendu-Ukeje
didn't set out for a career in politics. She grew up wanting to be a teacher,
and has degrees in English and in journalism from the University of Lagos in
southwest Nigeria.
However
that started to change in 1999 when Nigeria left behind decades of military
rule to become a democracy, sparking renewed interest in politics.
After
years of speaking with friends who were politicians, she decided to leave a
career in the hospitality industry to run for office in the 2007 election.
"I
just didn't feel that my voice was represented in the kind of laws that were
passed. I didn't think that my demographics ever showed up on the radar, with
the things that we were thinking about, talking about," she said.
Elendu-Ukeje saw her opportunity, wanting to fill this gap and ensure more
women spoke up and made laws affecting women, but it surprised her to meet resistance
from her father who was obsessed with J.F. Kennedy and forced her to read books
on him and on other politicians as she was growing up.
"He
said, 'You don't understand the terrain ... it's only for thugs, it's
dangerous'. Indeed it is and he got very scared," she said.
DISCOURAGED AT THE START
Elendu-Ukeje
also faced discouragement from other women who had excelled in other fields and
lamented how hard it was.
For
at the time, there seemed to be hardly any women on the political landscape and
politicians generally were much older.
"I
was a double minority. I was young and I was a woman ... but I felt there was a
gap," she said. "I think it was the lure of that ... that got me
interested in politics."
As
her father realised that she was going ahead with or without his approval, he
sent her two brothers with her to the polling booths in 2007 to protect her.
When
her father died of cancer three years after she was elected into parliament,
her mother joked that the reason he died was so he would not continue boring
the neighbours about watching his little girl on television.
"He
was absolutely supportive. He watched me for three years, my teething years.
Every time there was something about me in the news, he would buy all the
papers," she said fondly.
A typical day for Elendu-Ukeje begins with 30 minutes on the treadmill and ends
with spending time with her 11-year-old son, helping him with homework. In
between, she attends meetings in parliament where she chairs the Committee on
Foreign Relations.
For
her, being a woman in Nigerian politics means having to work twice as hard as
her male counterparts to constantly prove that she has earned her place in the
male-dominated world.
"I
would say that my greatest achievement in my dichotomous world is the ability to
run a home and a career while challenging the narrative of the typical Nigerian
female politician," she said.
There
have been times when Elendu-Ukeje thought of quitting politics. Lengthy periods
away from her son, the battles to assert herself, and the threat of violence
were some of the factors that have made her wonder if it is worth it.
"But
then the next day, I do something that changes people's lives. Or maybe I'm out
shopping and women walk up to me and pay me compliments and tell me how proud
they are of me and I feel and know that it is all worth it," she said.
Source: AllAfrica
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