Secrets Reporters
…Commission says exploitation, trafficking, child labour still thriving
…Thousands remain trapped outside classrooms despite constitutional guarantees
…Human rights body warns Nigeria’s future may be at risk
As governments, development partners and rights advocates prepare to mark the 2026 International Day of the African Child, troubling questions continue to hang over the fate of millions of Nigerian children whose daily realities remain far removed from the protections guaranteed by law.
From child labour camps and trafficking routes to conflict-ravaged communities where education has become a luxury, evidence suggests that many children remain exposed to exploitation, abuse and neglect despite Nigeria’s numerous legal commitments to their welfare.
It is against this backdrop that the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) has sounded a fresh warning, urging authorities and stakeholders to move beyond declarations and take concrete action to protect vulnerable children.
The Executive Secretary of the Commission, Chief Tony Ojukwu (SAN), warned that the country’s future rests heavily on the well-being of today’s children, stressing that access to quality education and protection from abuse must become a national priority.
The Promise and the Reality
Nigeria’s legal framework appears robust on paper.
The Constitution, Child Rights Act and several other laws contain provisions designed to protect children from abuse, exploitation and discrimination.
Beyond domestic legislation, Nigeria is also a signatory to international conventions, including the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child.
Yet, despite these commitments, many children continue to face circumstances that suggest a widening gap between policy and reality.
For many families, especially those affected by insecurity, displacement and poverty, access to education remains uncertain while cases of trafficking, child labour and abuse continue to surface across different parts of the country.
The Complaints That Keep Coming
According to the Commission, complaints involving violations of children’s rights continue to reach its Women and Children Department.
The department, which investigates such cases, has over the years handled reports ranging from child neglect and abuse to labour exploitation and forced marriages.
The Commission disclosed that it has intervened in several cases, facilitating the rescue of children from harmful situations and supporting efforts aimed at reuniting victims with their families.
But rights advocates argue that the recurring nature of such complaints points to deeper structural challenges requiring stronger enforcement and accountability mechanisms.
Why Education Remains the Battleground
Perhaps nowhere is the challenge more visible than in education.
While successive governments have repeatedly pledged to improve access to schooling, many children, particularly in rural and conflict-affected communities, continue to face significant barriers.
For the NHRC, investment in safe, inclusive and quality education remains one of the most effective ways to break cycles of poverty, exploitation and vulnerability.
A Warning Ahead of African Child Day
As Africa commemorates a day dedicated to reflecting on the rights and welfare of children, the Commission says symbolic celebrations alone will not be enough.
The challenge, according to the rights body, is ensuring that every child enjoys the protections already guaranteed by law.
Whether those protections will move beyond policy documents and become realities for millions of Nigerian children remains the question.
