At the start of 2024 Our founder Niniola promised to embark on school renovation projects and scholarship programs and in no time she swung into action.
She visited different schools with the team and gathered a list of their demands, and has embarked on the projects one step at a time.
She recently just completed the Re-electrification of OLOKUN PRIMARY SCHOOL ISOLO and has promised to keep working to make sure the students get good education and care. Thank You Niniola….
AU Silencing the Guns Campaign. (Mombassa, Kenya). Photo: Edesiri Ukiri
The Queen of Afro-House, Niniola Apata spoke with Mombassa-based, Eastern African news channel KTN News on the AU Silencing the Guns Campaign. The campaign kicked off following the African Union (AU) Extraordinary Summit discussions which were concluded on 6th Dec.
Being an official spokesperson of the campaign as well as a philanthropist, KTN reached out to Niniola. The two-time Grammy Awards nominee talks about the campaign and how she has been involved with it. Subsequently, Niniola also sheds light on the impact conflict has had on us and what it means for the future of Africa. She also talks about the African youth and how we all can contribute to ending all conflict.
In partnership with UNICEF, The Queen of AfroHouse and founder of Adopt a Child’s Education, award-winning singer and songwriter Niniola Apata alongside other top Nigerian musicians have released a song titled “For Every Child” and accompanying music video in support of children’s rights in Nigeria and the world at large.
The song release comes on the 30th anniversary of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), celebrated worldwide.
The song features children singing with Niniola, TuBaba, Chidinma, Timi Dakolo, Umar M. Sheriff and Cobhams Asuquo.
“With this song, we are urging all people to call for every right for every child. Every Nigerian child deserves a fair chance to (a) safe and healthy future and to fulfill their dreams,” said Peter Hawkins, UNICEF Nigeria Representative.
Niniola Apata, the founder of Adopt a Child’s Education, has partnered with UNICEF alongside other high profile Nigerian entertainers to rally support for children’s rights. The event, a collaboration between UNICEF and the British Deputy High Commission, brought key leaders and influencers from Nigeria’s private sector and entertainment industry together to discuss how these sectors can help advance the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the realization of children’s rights.
“Achieving the SDGs and achieving child rights go hand-in-hand,” said Peter Hawkins, UNICEF Nigeria Representative.
“Both will only be achieved if all sectors of business are fully engaged. Child rights and the SDGs need to be integrated into business principles, strategies, and plans, which, in turn, can contribute to more robust and inclusive economic growth and improved employment of young people. That is good for children, good for business and good for Nigeria.”
A strong push will need to be made by all if Nigeria is to meet the SDGs by 2030. The private sector could be a critical key in unlocking opportunities for young people, and also addressing poverty, combatting inequality and tackling environmental problems.
Niniola Apata, being a fervent advocate for child education, founded Adopt a Child’s Education in 2015. Through the organization, the award-winning singer and songwriter translates her passion for and belief in child education into a tangible cause. From the provision of scholarships to the supply of facilities to schools, Adopt A Child’s Education is impacting on child education one child at a time.
Niniola Apata’s Adopt a Child’s Education focuses on “educational excellence, access, and opportunity as well as children’s rights, safety, and well-being.”
“We are pleased to work with UNICEF, the private sector, and young people themselves on ideas that will contribute to a better Nigeria for current and future generations of children,” said Harriet Thompson, British Deputy High Commissioner in Nigeria.
“With the anniversary of the CRC this year, the 30th anniversary of the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child next year and only 10 years left to achieve the SDGs, we must work together and with urgency to scale-up solutions in Nigeria that will improve our planet and all people’s lives, especially our children.”
Nigeria’s Queen of Afro-House and child education advocate Niniola Apata stopped by DIGITEST 2019. DIGITEST is an annual creative camp and competition where young minds between the ages of eight and eighteen are being equipped with the requisite Information and Communication skills to becoming valuable human manpower and asset that will drive the social and economic activities of the country. Since its inception in the year 2000, DIGITEST has become a platform for impacting children from diverse backgrounds with the culture of leadership, entrepreneurship, cognitive development.
Niniola honoured the invitation to speak to DIGITEST participants, of which are mainly children, in her role as a strong public figure and the founder of Adopt a Child’s Education, her pet project that is focused on providing children with educational support and care. She interacted with the students and shared more than a few words of advice and encouragement with them. She topped it up with some games, gifts, music, and dance.
The difference between a smart child and an emotionally confident adult may lie in the depths of Emotional Quotient (EQ) and Social-Emotional Learning (SEL)
We discuss various examinations required to be passed by prospective undergrad students in Nigeria. We also introduce the concept of a conducive learning environment.
Sound Education: An ideal legacy, a father’s legacy.
A Father’s Legacy
My father is a firm believer in being educated, and this meant that my sisters and I may not have gotten the dresses we wanted, however, we certainly were not sitting at home when school resumed.