Let's talk about this, friends. No formings o. - Would you hold a pregnancy that could stop your learning or delay it for like seven years, when you can comfortably afford an abortion?
Read Aishat's article and let's discover what you believe.
Seven years after an unwanted pregnancy compelled her to drop out of the University of Ilorin, Aishat Farooq appeared the best graduating scholar of the chimes University of expertise, Ota, Ogun State.
When Aishat Farooq profited admission into the University of Ilorin at 15, to study Zoology, little did she know that she was not going to be an alumnus of the institution. That was in 2003.
Despite the detail that she was a high flyer in her first two years in UNILORIN, the now 25-year-old indigene of Ilorin West-Local Government locality of Kwara State got diverted along the line.
She performed the campus love game and got a alarming result: she got pregnant.
It was in 2006 and in her third year.
She was pregnant for a young person scholar who she had been going out with. She was let down in herself and thought the entire world was smashing into on her. Yet, she vowed not to terminate the pregnancy.
whereas she liked to extend her studies in the university, she became disillusioned and fallen out at 18. She sought consolation in swapping.
But her father, Mr. Shehu Farooq, who believed that his daughter’s learned prowess should not be trashed, was determined to get her back on the learned track.
Today, Aishat has a different article to notify.
On Saturday, she stood tall among her gazes at the 5th convocation observance of Bells University, Ota, Ogun State, where she appeared the overall best graduating scholar with a Cumulative degree issue Average of 4.93.
“The rebel in me won,” she announced while giving the valedictory address on behalf of the 208 graduating scholars of the university.
“I hope my article will motivate at least one person to change his or her circumstance. I was with child at 18 and by 19 I was currently a mother. I had let down my dad who accepted so much in me. He had such big aspirations for me and dreaded the aspirations would become unfulfilled,” she supplemented.
Breaking the report of the pregnancy to her father, who was at the time based in the to the north part of the country, was not easy.
Aishat’s mother, Fatima, who stayed in Lagos with the family, did not break the “sad report” to the man until the woman was almost due.
The mum feared her married man would be too furious. Fatima narrated to our correspondent:
“Looking back, we knew her to be very brilliant. But all of a sudden she got with child. Though her dad and I were habitually discussing on the phone, I hid it from him. when he said he would be approaching to Lagos to visit us, I would
rapidly chip it in that I would like to be the one to visit. So, I double-checked I was the one always travelling to him.“That was how I organised the position until the pregnancy was eight months. But even when we smashed the report to him, he sensed really awful. whereas there was not anything he could do, he couldn’t proceed out for three days
