Our voices are unheard, governors’ wives lament

Wives of the 36 state governors in Nigeria have called for greater visibility and communication capacity to support their social intervention work, saying that their efforts often go unnoticed despite complementing state-led development programmes.

Ogun State First Lady, Bamidele Abiodun, who spoke on behalf of her colleagues during a media and leadership retreat in Abuja yesterday, said as wives of elected governors, they are often the intersection of compassion and influence.

The retreat, tagged “Leading with Impact,” brought together wives of governors from across the 36 states to explore strategic communication, media engagement, and narrative building.

The retreat was facilitated by Emmy Award-winning journalist and former CNN Africa Senior Editor, Stephanie Busari, through her firm, SBB Media. According to Abiodun, first ladies across states work tirelessly to support communities, yet their voices are too often underrepresented or unheard of altogether.She noted that the training would change the narrative and strengthen the ability of first ladies to communicate with clarity, confidence and conviction.

Busari, on her part, noted that the first ladies, who are traditionally seen as ceremonial figures, are increasingly at the centre of social intervention, advocacy, and policy mobilisation across sectors, such as maternal health, education, gender-based violence, and economic empowerment.
She, however, lamented that many of these contributions go underreported or undervalued, largely due to limited access to structured media training or public strategy support.

“We realise that the work that they do is so vital with women, children, health, maternal mortality, things that are affecting so many aspects of our community. Like she rightly said, these are areas that the governors may not have oversight on.

“That is their role. And it’s their role also to make sure that you, as members of the media and the general community, know about these things, most especially the resources that people can access in their communities,” she said.

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