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    NPA meets with APM Terminals, shipping lines over container movement to seaport

    NPA showcases simplified export processes at Kano International Trade Fair

    NDLEA arrests 44 drug suspects with 2,059.83kg of illicit drugs in Edo state

    NDLEA arrests 44 drug suspects with 2,059.83kg of illicit drugs in Edo state

    Nigerian Navy flags off Exercise EBI-TORU to bolster maritime security

    Nigerian Navy flags off Exercise EBI-TORU to bolster maritime security

    Ex-Special Forces Commander urges military community to back defence minister-designate

    Ex-Special Forces Commander urges military community to back defence minister-designate

    Shettima presents NPA MD Dantsoho with PEBEC Leadership Award

    Shettima presents NPA MD Dantsoho with PEBEC Leadership Award

    Drug trafficking:17 convicts get 84 years in Edo state

    Drug trafficking:17 convicts get 84 years in Edo state

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    Edo NDLEA Command intercepts two vehicles with 1,046 kg cannabis sativa along Benin-Akure road, arrests two males

    Navy hands over 172kg of seized cannabis to NDLEA

    Navy hands over 172kg of seized cannabis to NDLEA

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      NPA meets with APM Terminals, shipping lines over container movement to seaport

      NPA showcases simplified export processes at Kano International Trade Fair

      Shettima presents NPA MD Dantsoho with PEBEC Leadership Award

      Shettima presents NPA MD Dantsoho with PEBEC Leadership Award

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        NPA meets with APM Terminals, shipping lines over container movement to seaport

        NPA showcases simplified export processes at Kano International Trade Fair

        NDLEA arrests 44 drug suspects with 2,059.83kg of illicit drugs in Edo state

        NDLEA arrests 44 drug suspects with 2,059.83kg of illicit drugs in Edo state

        Nigerian Navy flags off Exercise EBI-TORU to bolster maritime security

        Nigerian Navy flags off Exercise EBI-TORU to bolster maritime security

        Ex-Special Forces Commander urges military community to back defence minister-designate

        Ex-Special Forces Commander urges military community to back defence minister-designate

        Shettima presents NPA MD Dantsoho with PEBEC Leadership Award

        Shettima presents NPA MD Dantsoho with PEBEC Leadership Award

        Drug trafficking:17 convicts get 84 years in Edo state

        Drug trafficking:17 convicts get 84 years in Edo state

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      • Economy
        NPA meets with APM Terminals, shipping lines over container movement to seaport

        NPA showcases simplified export processes at Kano International Trade Fair

        NDLEA arrests 44 drug suspects with 2,059.83kg of illicit drugs in Edo state

        NDLEA arrests 44 drug suspects with 2,059.83kg of illicit drugs in Edo state

        Nigerian Navy flags off Exercise EBI-TORU to bolster maritime security

        Nigerian Navy flags off Exercise EBI-TORU to bolster maritime security

        Ex-Special Forces Commander urges military community to back defence minister-designate

        Ex-Special Forces Commander urges military community to back defence minister-designate

        Shettima presents NPA MD Dantsoho with PEBEC Leadership Award

        Shettima presents NPA MD Dantsoho with PEBEC Leadership Award

        Drug trafficking:17 convicts get 84 years in Edo state

        Drug trafficking:17 convicts get 84 years in Edo state

        Edo NDLEA Command intercepts two vehicles with 1,046 kg cannabis sativa along Benin-Akure road, arrests two males

        Edo NDLEA Command intercepts two vehicles with 1,046 kg cannabis sativa along Benin-Akure road, arrests two males

        Navy hands over 172kg of seized cannabis to NDLEA

        Navy hands over 172kg of seized cannabis to NDLEA

        Maritime Governance: Oyetola deposits  three Accession Instruments at the IMO

        NPCC congratulates Oyetola, describes Nigeria’s return to IMO Council as diplomatic milestone, growing maritime capabilities

        Trending Tags

        • Waterside Centre
          • All
          • Maritime Community Hub
          • Mentorship
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          • WASH
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          Oyetola hosts delegates, reaffirms Nigeria’s global maritime commitment after IMO Council victory

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          NIMASA unveils model for African maritime decarbonization at COP 30

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          Green Border Initiative expands to Seme as COWA scales up environmental empowerment drive

          Master mariners seek professionals for policy-making positions to protect Nigerian seafarers

          Master mariners seek professionals for policy-making positions to protect Nigerian seafarers

          Happy 75th birthday to Prince Olayiwola Shittu, a Beacon of Nigerian Maritime Industry

          Happy 75th birthday to Prince Olayiwola Shittu, a Beacon of Nigerian Maritime Industry

          Naval officers from 20 countries visit NIMASA C4i Centre for knowledge sharing

          Naval officers from 20 countries visit NIMASA C4i Centre for knowledge sharing

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          France, Nigeria joint military exercise ‘Crocodile Lift’ in Gulf of Guinea strengthens maritime security cooperation

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          How Nigeria will benefit from renewable energy, sustainable ocean use – Capt. Iheanacho

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          • Life at Sea
          • Seafarers
          Public Petitions Committee: NIMASA, Delta Community agree on Alternative Dispute Resolution 

          NIMASA creates Maritime Labour E-Platform for seafarers, dockworkers  

          Maritime LookBook: 2025 Graduation Ceremony of the Maritime Academy of Nigeria

          Photo News: Mariners at the 2025 MAN, Oron graduation ceremony

          Maritime LookBook: 2025 Graduation Ceremony of the Maritime Academy of Nigeria

          AMANO President Maiguwa honours teacher Adeyanju with holiday, cash gift

          AMANO President Maiguwa honours teacher Adeyanju with holiday, cash gift

          Maritime Academy of Nigeria boosts training capacity…establishes new seatime opportunities for cadets 

          Maritime Academy of Nigeria boosts training capacity…establishes new seatime opportunities for cadets 

          Master mariners seek professionals for policy-making positions to protect Nigerian seafarers

          Master mariners seek professionals for policy-making positions to protect Nigerian seafarers

          IMO Scribe, FMMBE Minister commend Maritime Academy of Nigeria for outstanding performance

          IMO Scribe, FMMBE Minister commend Maritime Academy of Nigeria for outstanding performance

          WMD 2025: Maritime Academy of Nigeria’s cadets win big in essay competition

          WMD 2025: Maritime Academy of Nigeria’s cadets win big in essay competition

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          Katsina adopts Dakuku Peterside’s Leadership books for Public Service renewal

          NLS, PH Club host conversation on Peterside’s new books

          Maritime LookBook: 2025 Graduation Ceremony of the Maritime Academy of Nigeria

          Photo News: Mariners at the 2025 MAN, Oron graduation ceremony

          Maritime LookBook: 2025 Graduation Ceremony of the Maritime Academy of Nigeria

          AMANO President Maiguwa honours teacher Adeyanju with holiday, cash gift

          AMANO President Maiguwa honours teacher Adeyanju with holiday, cash gift

          Happy 60th birthday, Pastor Sarah Ballah!

          Happy 60th birthday, Pastor Sarah Ballah!

          Katsina adopts Dakuku Peterside’s Leadership books for Public Service renewal

          Katsina adopts Dakuku Peterside’s Leadership books for Public Service renewal

          IMO Secretary-General commends Nigeria’s maritime security gains, Deep Blue Project, and Blue Economy Policy

          Photo News: IMO Secretary-General interacts with cadets from Maritime Academy of Nigeria

          Lagos State Health District IV , Nigerian Stock Exchange launch “BLOOM” nutrition project

          Lagos State Health District IV , Nigerian Stock Exchange launch “BLOOM” nutrition project

          Akabogu Law hosts West Africa Shipping Assembly

          Maritime Lawyer, Emeka Akabogu, 56 others elevated to Senior Advocate of Nigeria

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          • CEOs Talk
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          • Lessons Learned
          • Maritime History
          • Opinions
          • Reality Check
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          NPA meets with APM Terminals, shipping lines over container movement to seaport

          NPA showcases simplified export processes at Kano International Trade Fair

          Shettima presents NPA MD Dantsoho with PEBEC Leadership Award

          Shettima presents NPA MD Dantsoho with PEBEC Leadership Award

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          Tinubu opens C-PACT Summit, says Africa must break inefficient borders

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          Trade Matters: TinCan Island Customs Command collects N154bn revenue in October 2025

          Nigeria reaffirms commitment to seamless African trade

          Nigeria reaffirms commitment to seamless African trade

          Governing Council rejects community demand to convert Maritime Academy of Nigeria into university

          Governing Council rejects community demand to convert Maritime Academy of Nigeria into university

          GFX leads African financial inclusion drive by tokenising government bonds

          GFX leads African financial inclusion drive by tokenising government bonds

          Trade Matters: Apapa Customs Command unveils Electronic Cargo Tracking System for trade efficiency

          Trade Matters: Apapa Customs Command unveils Electronic Cargo Tracking System for trade efficiency

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          Trade Matters: Apapa Customs Command hits record revenue collection of ₦304bn in October

        • The Mailbag
          Shipping Development: NIMASA reengineering modalities to activate CVFF disbursement, modular floating dock

          NIMASA accredits 27 registered shipyards for operation in Nigeria

          NIMASA C4i grants access to shipping surveillance unit

          NIMASA’s crusade to end War Risk Insurance premiums to save Nigeria over $400bn annually

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          CGC Adeniyi reactivates over decade-old CMAA with US Customs & Border Protection

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          Essien thanks Jamoh as he bows out of NIMASA

          Nigerian Chambers of Shipping guarantees maximum participation in Nigeria’s domestic, international trade – Sambo

          Nigerian Chambers of Shipping guarantees maximum participation in Nigeria’s domestic, international trade – Sambo

          FG to harmonize taxes paid by jetty operators

          Shipping Development: FG approves disbursement of N16bn, $350m CVFF

          Seafarer happiness index improves

          Up to 800,000 seafarers require carbon upskilling by mid-2030

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          APM Terminals Apapa, FREEE sign MoU to recycle used tyres

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          Demystifying the myth: Shinning a clear path for entry of girls into the legal profession

          onepageafrica by onepageafrica
          June 4, 2020
          in Uncategorized
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          By
          Dr
          Balkisu Saidu
          Faculty
          of Law, Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto
          Introduction
          The zeitgeist[1]
          of our time is accommodative of a world where women contribute as much, if not
          more than, their male counterparts, in all spheres of endeavour including in
          the legal profession. Prior to 1935, when Stella Jane Thomas was enrolled at
          the Bar, the legal profession in Nigeria was the exclusivity of the males.
          Today, women are found in all areas of the legal profession: advocacy,
          adjudication, academia, etc.

          The journey had
          not by any means been turmoil-free. There were times in the history of the
          quest for education of the girl-child, especially in the Northern part of
          Nigeria, when the socio-cultural patterns and religious misconceptions limited
          her access, retention and completion of even the basic part of conventional
          education. 

          Those practices of bias and discrimination are now gradually paving
          the way for more access and choices for girls. 
          Having overcome some of the
          worst hurdles in the path to education, in this piece, I make a case for the
          girl-child to consider law as a first choice in the determination of courses of
          study, but first, I address some of the challenges/myths that may stand in the
          path of a Northern girl wishing to pursue the study of law.
          Myths and Real Challenge to the Study of Law
          1.        REGALIA:      There
          is the misconception that it is part of the requirement of the legal profession
          for women to wear short skirts, tight jackets, and leave their hair uncovered.
          This is very much far from the truth. 
          Certainly, the legal profession has its
          codes and ethics with regard to mode of dressing and appearance, but these
          codes and ethics are not at variance with the general culture of the people of
          the North.
          The esoteric regalia
          of the lawyers in Nigeria traces its origin to the Legal Practitioners
          Ordinance No. 30 of 1915 (
          SAINT
          LUCIA), section 5 (1) of which provides that “Every barrister of the Royal
          Court shall have a right of audience in all the Courts of Justice in this
          Colony: Provided that counsel appearing before the Royal Court, or Court of
          Appeal, have no right of audience,
          unless they are clad in dark clothes and wear the robes and bands proper to
          their calling
          .”
          This in no way advocates for immodest dressing. In
          fact, immodest dressing is abhorred in the legal profession. There are cases
          where female lawyers have been publicly admonished on the importance of
          maintaining the
          culture of decent dressing when
          appearing before a court of law. 
          In a lecture delivered at the Judges Forum of
          the Nigerian Bar Association Annual General Conference in Port Harcourt (2011)
          on the topic “Mutual Respect
          between the Bench and the Bar: Courtroom Ethics and Decorum” Funke Adekoya,
          Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) advised female lawyers not to dress to the
          court “as if you are going to a night club.” The learned Silk likened such mode
          of dressing to act of disrespect to the court.
          This position expressed
          is clearly enshrined in the Rules of Professional Conduct for Legal Practitioners
          2007. Article 36 thereof provides that a lawyer appearing before the court
          shall “(a) be attired in a proper and dignified manner and shall not wear any
          apparel or ornament calculated to attract attention to himself; (b) conduct
          himself with decency and decorum, and observe the customs, conduct and code of
          behaviour of the court and custom of practice at the bar with respect to
          appearance, dress, manners and courtesy.”
          It is also part
          of the dress code, right from Law School that ladies are strictly prohibited
          from wearing trousers and their skirts must, under no circumstance, be above
          the knees.
          Skull caps and
          cape hijabs are now a frequent
          sighting in courtrooms. Even in superior courts where wigs are part of the
          compulsory regalia of lawyers, Muslim women do wear skull caps or cape hijabs beneath their wigs. 
          In
          spite of the secular stance of the country as adopted in section 10 of the
          Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999, as amended, the pluralistic
          religious nature of Nigeria has indeed been recognised and respected by the
          legal profession. In some campuses of the Law School, students go to classes
          clad in full length hijabs.
          2.        COST:            Some
          States in the North, such as Sokoto State, pay the registration fees for
          indigenes of the States at both undergraduate and Law School levels. At
          postgraduate level, there are scholarship and grant opportunities available to
          both male and female students of law from international organisations. These
          include United Nations International Law Fellowship
          Programme, King’s Nigerian Law Scholar Fund for Masters Students, Global
          Leaders Fellowship for Nigerian Students, Chevening Scholarship, and Monbukagakusho
          (MEXT) Scholarship, among others
          . The writer benefited from the
          last two mentioned scholarships in the United Kingdom and Japan. You or your
          parents do not have to carry the entire burden of your training.
          3.        LENGHT OF PERIOD OF STUDY: This is a
          very real challenge to some girls, particularly those from the North. The study
          of law in Nigerian Universities takes four (4) to five (5) years depending on
          the point of entry (UG I or UG II – JAMB or Direct Entry). Upon the completion
          of the undergraduate training, candidates are required to undergo one (1) year
          training in the Nigerian Law School in order to qualify for call to the
          Nigerian Bar.
           It is only after the successful completion of this 5 or six (6)
          year training that one could qualify as a lawyer. Considering that the earliest
          age one could gain admission into a Nigerian University is sixteen (16) years,
          according to the Joint Admissions and
          Matriculations Board
          (JAMB),
          which specifies that a candidate for admission into any undergraduate programme
          of a Nigerian University must have attained the age of 16 or will do so on the
          first day of October in the year of candidature, this is a real challenge. It
          takes any girl wishing to qualify as a lawyer before marriage into her early
          twenties before such qualification; an arrangement many parents in the North do
          not support.
          In recent years,
          girls have succeeded in successfully combining the responsibilities of
          matrimony with those of pursuit of education. If you happen to get married
          before completion of your training, that should not be a barrier to your
          success in the study of law. Some of us waded through that hurdle.
           Why Study Law
          in the midst of Range of Disciplines?
          Law is one discipline that
          cuts across all other disciplines. All! When you study law, you get an insight
          into a whole range of disciplines. 

          Law affects everything. The study of
          law opens up your mind to wide-ranging possibilities in the study of medicine
          and other sciences in tort law, copyright law in literature, economics in treaties
          and law of contract, geo-politics in international law, and sociology in family
          law, among others.
          Law guides your
          development of a range of skills. It challenges you to sharpen your intellect,
          strengthen your understanding and deepen your appreciation of other courses in humanities
          and social sciences. When you study law, you
          develop your ability for abstract
          thinking and methods of practical problem-solving. 
          These
          skills are acquired through diverse methods of creative intellectual teaching
          and learning process: Socratic
          Method (method of elenchus)
          of debate and articulation,
          tutorials, moot court competitions,
          where skills are developed in analytical thinking and oral presentations, etc. Law
          Clinics offer additional training ground for students to, through the provision
          of pro bono services, give legal
          advice and support to real people with real problems.
          When you train
          in law, you stand a better chance of reaching the highest echelon of your
          career. Even with the patriarchal outlook of Northern Nigeria, women of
          Northern extraction have occupied some of the highest positions in the legal
          profession. This may not be unconnected with the fact that there are no women
          in law.
           Once you are able to overcome the rigours of the training and you are
          called to the Bar, your gender ‘disappears.’ Some of these Northern women who
          excelled as lawyers include the immediate past Chief Justice of Nigeria,
          Justice Aloma Mariam Mukhtar (2012-2014)
          who is an indigene of Kano State; the current President
          of the Court of Appeal (PCA),
          Justice Zainab Bulkachuwa
          who hails from Gombe State; the i
          mmediate
          past Chief Judge of Kaduna State, Justice Rahila Hadea
          Cudjoe; and the current Chief Judge of Sokoto State, Justice Aisha Sani Dahiru.
          Others
          are the Chief Judge of Niger State, Justice Fati Abubakar; and the Acting Chief
          Judge of Kano State,
          Justice Patricia
          Mahmoud. In the academia, Northern women are also well represented. For
          example, the famous Professor Hauwa Ibrahim of Harvard University, Cambridge,
          Massachusetts, United States of America, hails from Gombe State.
          Aside from
          careers in the legal profession, you stand a favourable chance of being
          considered for positions that require analytic thinking in Law Enforcement, Academia,
          International Organisations and the business world. Moreover, there are certain
          jobs that have, by law, been made to be the exclusive reserve of persons in the
          legal profession, for example, the position of Registrar-General of Corporate
          Affairs Commission, and, along with other professionals, the position of a
          Secretary in a Public Company. In addition, every lawyer in Nigeria is
          qualified as Solicitor and Advocate. 
          Even if your plan is not to pursue a
          career as an advocate or a Judge, you can still make a living from being a
          Solicitor. In a society with very limited social welfare schemes and social
          safety nets, this angle of the profession could provide you with income even
          after retirement from formal employment.
          You also stand
          a very good chance, by your training, of being a mediator or an arbitrator.
          This usually comes to women naturally! As a daughter, as a sister, as a wife,
          as a mother, you are always settling disputes. Apart from your natural
          disposition of empathy, the skills you acquire from your training of law
          prepare you for such calling.
          From the
          foregoing, you could see that there are numerous advantages in the study of
          law. As girls and women, we have come a long way, but there are still some
          obscure challenges lurking in the path of the development of girl-child. 
          The
          sure way to confront and overcome them is to acquire the skills and qualifications
          that will afford you the right of hearing before every court in Nigeria to
          advocate for causes that matter to you and bring about justice in your society.
          Remember, even the figure of justice is represented by the
          female statue, “Lady Justice.”
          Study law and qualify as a lawyer, you
          will be glad you did.


          [1] the defining
          spirit or mood of a particular period of history as shown by the ideas and
          beliefs of the time.


          The British Council requested for the publication of this article as part of celebration of the International Day of the Girl Child.
          By
          Dr
          Balkisu Saidu
          Faculty
          of Law, Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto
          Introduction
          The zeitgeist[1]
          of our time is accommodative of a world where women contribute as much, if not
          more than, their male counterparts, in all spheres of endeavour including in
          the legal profession. Prior to 1935, when Stella Jane Thomas was enrolled at
          the Bar, the legal profession in Nigeria was the exclusivity of the males.
          Today, women are found in all areas of the legal profession: advocacy,
          adjudication, academia, etc.

          The journey had
          not by any means been turmoil-free. There were times in the history of the
          quest for education of the girl-child, especially in the Northern part of
          Nigeria, when the socio-cultural patterns and religious misconceptions limited
          her access, retention and completion of even the basic part of conventional
          education. 

          Those practices of bias and discrimination are now gradually paving
          the way for more access and choices for girls. 
          Having overcome some of the
          worst hurdles in the path to education, in this piece, I make a case for the
          girl-child to consider law as a first choice in the determination of courses of
          study, but first, I address some of the challenges/myths that may stand in the
          path of a Northern girl wishing to pursue the study of law.
          Myths and Real Challenge to the Study of Law
          1.        REGALIA:      There
          is the misconception that it is part of the requirement of the legal profession
          for women to wear short skirts, tight jackets, and leave their hair uncovered.
          This is very much far from the truth. 
          Certainly, the legal profession has its
          codes and ethics with regard to mode of dressing and appearance, but these
          codes and ethics are not at variance with the general culture of the people of
          the North.
          The esoteric regalia
          of the lawyers in Nigeria traces its origin to the Legal Practitioners
          Ordinance No. 30 of 1915 (
          SAINT
          LUCIA), section 5 (1) of which provides that “Every barrister of the Royal
          Court shall have a right of audience in all the Courts of Justice in this
          Colony: Provided that counsel appearing before the Royal Court, or Court of
          Appeal, have no right of audience,
          unless they are clad in dark clothes and wear the robes and bands proper to
          their calling
          .”
          This in no way advocates for immodest dressing. In
          fact, immodest dressing is abhorred in the legal profession. There are cases
          where female lawyers have been publicly admonished on the importance of
          maintaining the
          culture of decent dressing when
          appearing before a court of law. 
          In a lecture delivered at the Judges Forum of
          the Nigerian Bar Association Annual General Conference in Port Harcourt (2011)
          on the topic “Mutual Respect
          between the Bench and the Bar: Courtroom Ethics and Decorum” Funke Adekoya,
          Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) advised female lawyers not to dress to the
          court “as if you are going to a night club.” The learned Silk likened such mode
          of dressing to act of disrespect to the court.
          This position expressed
          is clearly enshrined in the Rules of Professional Conduct for Legal Practitioners
          2007. Article 36 thereof provides that a lawyer appearing before the court
          shall “(a) be attired in a proper and dignified manner and shall not wear any
          apparel or ornament calculated to attract attention to himself; (b) conduct
          himself with decency and decorum, and observe the customs, conduct and code of
          behaviour of the court and custom of practice at the bar with respect to
          appearance, dress, manners and courtesy.”
          It is also part
          of the dress code, right from Law School that ladies are strictly prohibited
          from wearing trousers and their skirts must, under no circumstance, be above
          the knees.
          Skull caps and
          cape hijabs are now a frequent
          sighting in courtrooms. Even in superior courts where wigs are part of the
          compulsory regalia of lawyers, Muslim women do wear skull caps or cape hijabs beneath their wigs. 
          In
          spite of the secular stance of the country as adopted in section 10 of the
          Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999, as amended, the pluralistic
          religious nature of Nigeria has indeed been recognised and respected by the
          legal profession. In some campuses of the Law School, students go to classes
          clad in full length hijabs.
          2.        COST:            Some
          States in the North, such as Sokoto State, pay the registration fees for
          indigenes of the States at both undergraduate and Law School levels. At
          postgraduate level, there are scholarship and grant opportunities available to
          both male and female students of law from international organisations. These
          include United Nations International Law Fellowship
          Programme, King’s Nigerian Law Scholar Fund for Masters Students, Global
          Leaders Fellowship for Nigerian Students, Chevening Scholarship, and Monbukagakusho
          (MEXT) Scholarship, among others
          . The writer benefited from the
          last two mentioned scholarships in the United Kingdom and Japan. You or your
          parents do not have to carry the entire burden of your training.
          3.        LENGHT OF PERIOD OF STUDY: This is a
          very real challenge to some girls, particularly those from the North. The study
          of law in Nigerian Universities takes four (4) to five (5) years depending on
          the point of entry (UG I or UG II – JAMB or Direct Entry). Upon the completion
          of the undergraduate training, candidates are required to undergo one (1) year
          training in the Nigerian Law School in order to qualify for call to the
          Nigerian Bar.
           It is only after the successful completion of this 5 or six (6)
          year training that one could qualify as a lawyer. Considering that the earliest
          age one could gain admission into a Nigerian University is sixteen (16) years,
          according to the Joint Admissions and
          Matriculations Board
          (JAMB),
          which specifies that a candidate for admission into any undergraduate programme
          of a Nigerian University must have attained the age of 16 or will do so on the
          first day of October in the year of candidature, this is a real challenge. It
          takes any girl wishing to qualify as a lawyer before marriage into her early
          twenties before such qualification; an arrangement many parents in the North do
          not support.
          In recent years,
          girls have succeeded in successfully combining the responsibilities of
          matrimony with those of pursuit of education. If you happen to get married
          before completion of your training, that should not be a barrier to your
          success in the study of law. Some of us waded through that hurdle.
           Why Study Law
          in the midst of Range of Disciplines?
          Law is one discipline that
          cuts across all other disciplines. All! When you study law, you get an insight
          into a whole range of disciplines. 

          Law affects everything. The study of
          law opens up your mind to wide-ranging possibilities in the study of medicine
          and other sciences in tort law, copyright law in literature, economics in treaties
          and law of contract, geo-politics in international law, and sociology in family
          law, among others.
          Law guides your
          development of a range of skills. It challenges you to sharpen your intellect,
          strengthen your understanding and deepen your appreciation of other courses in humanities
          and social sciences. When you study law, you
          develop your ability for abstract
          thinking and methods of practical problem-solving. 
          These
          skills are acquired through diverse methods of creative intellectual teaching
          and learning process: Socratic
          Method (method of elenchus)
          of debate and articulation,
          tutorials, moot court competitions,
          where skills are developed in analytical thinking and oral presentations, etc. Law
          Clinics offer additional training ground for students to, through the provision
          of pro bono services, give legal
          advice and support to real people with real problems.
          When you train
          in law, you stand a better chance of reaching the highest echelon of your
          career. Even with the patriarchal outlook of Northern Nigeria, women of
          Northern extraction have occupied some of the highest positions in the legal
          profession. This may not be unconnected with the fact that there are no women
          in law.
           Once you are able to overcome the rigours of the training and you are
          called to the Bar, your gender ‘disappears.’ Some of these Northern women who
          excelled as lawyers include the immediate past Chief Justice of Nigeria,
          Justice Aloma Mariam Mukhtar (2012-2014)
          who is an indigene of Kano State; the current President
          of the Court of Appeal (PCA),
          Justice Zainab Bulkachuwa
          who hails from Gombe State; the i
          mmediate
          past Chief Judge of Kaduna State, Justice Rahila Hadea
          Cudjoe; and the current Chief Judge of Sokoto State, Justice Aisha Sani Dahiru.
          Others
          are the Chief Judge of Niger State, Justice Fati Abubakar; and the Acting Chief
          Judge of Kano State,
          Justice Patricia
          Mahmoud. In the academia, Northern women are also well represented. For
          example, the famous Professor Hauwa Ibrahim of Harvard University, Cambridge,
          Massachusetts, United States of America, hails from Gombe State.
          Aside from
          careers in the legal profession, you stand a favourable chance of being
          considered for positions that require analytic thinking in Law Enforcement, Academia,
          International Organisations and the business world. Moreover, there are certain
          jobs that have, by law, been made to be the exclusive reserve of persons in the
          legal profession, for example, the position of Registrar-General of Corporate
          Affairs Commission, and, along with other professionals, the position of a
          Secretary in a Public Company. In addition, every lawyer in Nigeria is
          qualified as Solicitor and Advocate. 
          Even if your plan is not to pursue a
          career as an advocate or a Judge, you can still make a living from being a
          Solicitor. In a society with very limited social welfare schemes and social
          safety nets, this angle of the profession could provide you with income even
          after retirement from formal employment.
          You also stand
          a very good chance, by your training, of being a mediator or an arbitrator.
          This usually comes to women naturally! As a daughter, as a sister, as a wife,
          as a mother, you are always settling disputes. Apart from your natural
          disposition of empathy, the skills you acquire from your training of law
          prepare you for such calling.
          From the
          foregoing, you could see that there are numerous advantages in the study of
          law. As girls and women, we have come a long way, but there are still some
          obscure challenges lurking in the path of the development of girl-child. 
          The
          sure way to confront and overcome them is to acquire the skills and qualifications
          that will afford you the right of hearing before every court in Nigeria to
          advocate for causes that matter to you and bring about justice in your society.
          Remember, even the figure of justice is represented by the
          female statue, “Lady Justice.”
          Study law and qualify as a lawyer, you
          will be glad you did.


          [1] the defining
          spirit or mood of a particular period of history as shown by the ideas and
          beliefs of the time.


          The British Council requested for the publication of this article as part of celebration of the International Day of the Girl Child.
          Tags: AdvocacyBritish CouncilInternational Day of the Girl ChildlifestyleNewssociety
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