Besides Insecurity, Land Rights Hamper Nigerian Women’s Farming Efforts

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Many Nigerian communities still operate the traditional and family inheritance system of land ownership that gives preference to male children.

 

In Nigeria, gender plays a critical role in land ownership. While women farmers contribute about 70 per cent of food production in the country, according to the Food and Agriculture Organisation, land rights discrimination, fuelled by social, economic and cultural factors, affects their productivity.

The United Nations agency in 2011 said although women make up 43 per cent of the global agricultural labour force, fewer women own, operate and manage valuable plots than men.

For farmers like Justina Ishaku in central Nigeria, migration has made the problem even more complicated. When she relocated from Kogi State to neighbouring Nasarawa State, she had hoped to start a farming business and have a better life after suffering losses from her oil trading business. That did not happen as planned.

In search of land, Ms Ishaku met a man who gave her one plot. She began cultivating melon for two years before saving enough to start leasing land each farming season. Yet, even with her money, members of her new community refused to lease to her as a woman. After Ms Ishaku decided to search through a man, she soon got up to six hectares.

Hundreds of kilometres away in Lagos, Nigeria’s economic capital, Dumola Sodeke was not that fortunate. Even with her father and uncle as fronts, she could not lease let alone buy land.

“My uncle and dad stood as fronts for me in getting land in Lagos, then I have a business partner who stood as a front for me in Ibadan and Abeokuta. They were able to help me get lands in these locations. It’s very difficult for them to sell or lease lands to women,” she said.

“There was one my uncle got for me, when they discovered it was a woman that owned it, the ‘Omo Oniles’ ( land agents) raised the alarm, even after all my pleading and rolling on the floor, they did not listen to me. They rubbished me. It was really not easy, getting land for women is not easy.”

Nigeria’s limiting gender policy on land ownership

Many Nigerian communities still operate the traditional and family inheritance system of land ownership that gives preference to male children. By law, land in the country is owned by state governments, and control over them is exercised by the 36 governors.

A 2012 gender policy report by the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development showed that in rural Nigeria, only 8.5 per cent of the women own land compared to 38.1 per cent men. In the relatively poor rural areas, 10.1 per cent of women have access to land against 46.1 per cent men.

In urban centres, 4.5 percent of the women have access to land while 49.5 percent of men own land. Amongst the urban poor population, 5.9 percent of the women have land compared to 28 per cent of their male counterparts.

Underlying cultural diversity, the challenge of women having access to land differs across the country with the situation worse in the more conservative north than the south.

In the North-east, plagued by the jihadist Boko Haram insurgency, only four per cent of women own land against 52.2 per cent of men. In the North-west, which is also facing a severe security crisis caused by herders and the so-called bandits, 4.7 per cent of women own land compared to 50.1 per cent of men. In the North-central, the ratio is 7.9 per cent against 41.2 per cent.

In the South-east, 10.6 per cent of women own land compared to men’s 38.1 per cent; in the South-south, it is 10.9 per cent versus 5.9 per cent. Only the South-west had the women in ownership majority of 28.3 against 22.5 per cent of men. At the 2021 UN’s Food Systems Pre-Summit in Rome, leaders from Africa called on countries to transform food systems across all regions by prioritising women and youth in agricultural policies and finance.

The director for Africa at the International Food Policy Research Institute, Jemimah Njuki, said, “It’s one of the key issues that we have to grapple with: how to support women smallholder farmers, how to make sure they actually have the productive resources that they need to transform food systems, how to ensure they actually have right to the land that they cultivate.”

An estimated 54 million of Nigeria’s 78 million women are based in rural areas and make a living from land, according to the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development. The numbers are likely to be higher today as that is based on a previous survey.

“It is 2021 and there is no reason so far for women not to own lands, they have the largest percentage of people working in agriculture in Nigeria , they have the knowledge to better adapt to adverse effects of Agriculture,” said Chiagozie Udeh, a climate change activist.

“Looking at Nigeria’s food insecurity and the effect of Covid 19, it is crucial that women own land both in the Southern and Northern parts of the country. Also customary and religious laws that prohibit women from inheriting land should be addressed,” he said.

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