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General News of Wednesday, 9 June 2021

Source: www.mynigeria.com

Nigeria now has 211 million people - UNFPA report

The photo used to illustrate the story via Punch The photo used to illustrate the story via Punch

The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) in a report has set Nigeria's population to 211 million while the country's life expectancy for men and women was retained at 54 and 56 respectively.

The UNFPA’s latest ‘State of the World Population 2021’ report was launched by the Country Representative of the UNFPA, Ms Ulla Muella; the Minister of Women Affairs, Pauline Tallen; and the Chairman of the National Population Commission, Nasir Kwarra, in Abuja on Tuesday, June 8, 2021.

According to a 153-page report, Nigeria's 211 population is closely behind Brazil's population of 214 million.

The new figure is higher than the figure of the NPC, which was 206 million as of December 2020. According to the report, Nigeria’s population grew by 2.6 percent between 2015 and 2020, Punch said.

It further states that as of today, 43.3 percent of Nigeria’s population are between the ages of 0 and 14, while those between 15 and 64 years make up 53.9 percent of the population. Those above the age of 65 are just 2.8 percent of the population. The UNFPA retained Nigeria’s life expectancy at 54 for men and 56 for women.

On average, only Chad and the Central African Republic have a lower life expectancy than Nigeria. Nigeria’s fertility rate was put at 5.2 children per woman making it the 7th most fertile nation on earth behind only Niger (6.6), Somalia (5.8) Democratic Republic of Congo (5.6), Mali (5.6), Chad (5.5), and Angola (5.3).

Speaking on the theme, ‘My Body is My Own: Claiming the Right to Autonomy and Self-Determination,’ the UNFPA country representative said only 46 percent of married women in Nigeria were able to make decisions freely on their sexual and reproductive health.

Muella described the development as unfortunate, adding that there was a need for all stakeholders to do more to promote women’s rights. In her remarks, the Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development, Pauline Tallen, said the Federal Government was working hard to tackle fear and stigma of survivors of violence, weak community, and facility referral systems, lack of counseling services for women and girls, and the communities as well as seek justice for victims.

She, however, argued that entertainers were frustrating the government’s plans. Tallen added, “It is almost disheartening to note that while we are confronting these obstacles to increase advocacy, the entertainment industry which has large followership of young minds, continues to indirectly support the abuse of the female body as a sex object through vulgar lyrics and employment of female dancers in compromising customs.

“This is indeed unacceptable. I want to use this opportunity to appeal to producers and writers to support us so that together we can ensure that the Nigerian society is able to guarantee an environment where girls and women can make choices about their bodies without the fear of violence or having someone else decide for them.”