Airtel, Nigeria’s leading telecommunications
services provider, has joined in the effort to rehabilitate destitute children who
are currently roaming the streets of Lagos.
In the third episode of its Touching Lives Corporate Social
Responsibility (CSR) programme, which aired on television at the weekend, the
telecom giant awarded a scholarship worth one million naira to a promising
teenage boy whose continued stay in school had become uncertain.
Having lost his father and with no
one else to raise him, Rotimi Azeez had hustled his way to the country’s
commercial capital in a desperate move to raise money for his education.
However, a few months after his
arrival, he became homeless and at the mercy of the city’s caprices. “You
never know when it’s going to rain on you all night because you can never
predict the rain,” he said.
But
he was soon rescued by the Street Child Care and Welfare Initiative (SCCWI), a
non-governmental organisation devoted to vagrant children.
Speaking
to Airtel Touching Lives, Comfort
Alli, president of SCCWI, said the problem of destitute children had become a
public emergency. She noted that more than 250,000 minors are currently
drifting around in the metropolis. “The problem is bigger than the government
of Lagos State,” she said. “Everybody has to be on ground to make sure that
they fight this problem.”
This
is why, according to her, the charity elected to focus on bringing relief to
runaway and abandoned kids. Some of the wandering youths had become “fathers of
street children” and many were exposed to drugs, homosexuality, and
life-threatening diseases such as HIV.
Before
the 16 year old was rescued, he was “very wild, shattered, and malnourished; he
probably would have become an armed robber or pickpocket,” said Folake Shittu,
a senior counsellor at the aid organisation.
Now,
three years later, “his attitude has changed, he has better self esteem, and improved
academic performance,” said Victor Adejunle, who had been Azeez’s mentor at
SCCWI for more than two years.
But
since the economy slid into recession in 2016, donations to the NGO have
dwindled significantly. For this reason, Alli explained, paying for Azeez’s
schooling would no longer be as easy as it used to be. Although the boy had
always hoped to become a lawyer, “if he doesn’t get help, he’ll be back to
square one,” she said.
While
accepting the Airtel intervention, Azeez said the grant would change his life.
“I don’t think anyone in my family has ever received a scholarship of one
million naira. I’m happy today. It’s a good thing,” he said.
Touching Lives will be back
this weekend to its regular schedule on local and international television
networks, Airtel has said.
On
Saturday, the fourth episode of season three will premiere on Africa Magic
Urban at 6:30pm and on Africa Magic Family at 7pm. It will later air on RaveTV
from 9-9:30pm.
The
next day, Africa Magic World will show a rerun of the episode from 6-6:30pm.
NTA Network and ArewaTV will do the same from 6:00-6.30pm and from 7-7:30pm,
respectively.
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