Northern Governors align on urgency of investing in first 2,000 days of lives
Northern Governors align on urgency of investing in first 2,000 days of lives
The Northern Governors Forum (NGF), has aligned on the urgency of investing in the first 2,000 days of lives.
The “First 2,000 Days” refers to the period from conception to approximately age five, which is critically important for a child’s long-term development
During this phase, a child’s brain and body undergo rapid development, making adequate nutrition, healthcare, stimulation and foundational learning interventions crucial for lifelong health, learning, and productivity.
The Voice Media Trust (VMT NEWS), reports that the NGF members were in Kaduna on Monday and Tuesday for a joint emergency meeting.
VMT NEWS also reports that the NGF on Tuesday, hosted the World Bank.
The Team Lead for Stunting and Early Years at the World Bank, Dr Ritgak Tilley-Gyado, outlined the demographic, economic and service-delivery imperatives for strengthening the first 2,000 days of infants lives.
Tilley-Gyado said they were at the forum as part of the ongoing national consultations on strengthening Nigeria’s human capital, which focused on the country’s early years priorities, with emphasis on nutrition, early learning and child development in the first 2,000 days of life.
She explained that the World Bank support is channeled through the Human Capital Development Core Working Group (HCD-CWG), which is a committee of the National Economic Council coordinated by the Office of the Vice President.
The CWG supports and Analytical Advisory Group, forms part of a broader sequence of engagements with federal ministries, development partners and state governments aimed at aligning evidence, policy options and delivery pathways for a future early years programme.
In her presentation to the forum, Tilley-Gyado, highlighted the importance of preventing stunting, supporting early stimulation and foundational learning, and strengthening family systems to empower women and ensure responsive caregiving and positive parenting.
She described building strong early years outcomes as a people, economic and a social stability strategy, particularly for regions experiencing demographic pressures.
Also, Dr Mathew Verghis, World Bank Country Director for Nigeria, said that states hold the largest delivery responsibility and are therefore central to shaping a nationally coherent, yet locally grounded approach that can deliver results at scale.
Verghis emphasised that the conversations, reflect an emerging recognition that Early Years outcomes depend on multisectoral action, requiring strong collaboration and convergence across health and nutrition, education, WASH, women’s empowerment, food and diets, agriculture and social protection.
He, therefore, said the consultations were part of a deliberate, evidence-first process to build a nationally coherent and state-responsive Early Years platform grounded in local realities and multisectoral priorities.
“Nigeria’s Early Years agenda is expected to form a core component of broader human capital efforts being advanced under the National Economic Council’s Human Capital Development framework,”he said.
Responding, Gov. Umar Namadi of Jigawa, opened the interventions by highlighting the strong links between poverty and poor early childhood development outcomes.
He commended the World Bank’s results based instruments and offered constructive suggestions for strengthening them.
Also, Gov. Umaru Bago of Niger, underscored the importance of micronutrients, including fortified and biofortified foods already being produced locally.
Gov. Caleb Mutfwang of Plateau, acknowledged the complexity of multisectoral initiatives, affirming his commitment to strengthening evidence delivery arrangements.
Gov. Dauda Lawal of Zamfara, emphasised that while many challenges were legacy issues, the region now has a real opportunity to turn the tide through decisive early years investments.
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Gov. Inuwa Yahaya of Gombe State, expressed satisfaction with the state’s strong partnership with the World Bank.
Other Governors welcomed the analysis and affirmed their readiness to engage further.
Their consensus was that investing in the 2,000 early days of children is the most important investment they can make if they want peace, productivity and a stronger northern economy.
The governors stated that the region cannot afford to miss another generation.
“The Early Years agenda must reflect our realities and support our frontline workers.
“We are ready to take the leadership to shape what this becomes,”they said.