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Stepping Stones Nigeria

Safe Child Africa
Founded 2005
Founder Gary & Naomi Foxcroft
Type NGO
Registration no. 1112476
Location
  • Manchester, England
Area served
Nigeria
Employees
5
Slogan Defending rights, creating futures
Website Safe Child Africa

Safe Child Africa is a UK registered charity that works with and through Nigerian partners to protect and uphold child rights in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria. It was founded by Gary Foxcroft in 2005. Safe Child Africa is based in Manchester, England.

The charity began in 2003 when Gary Foxcroft visited Nigeria to undertake research into community perceptions of the oil industry for his master's degree at Lancaster University. After witnessing the plight of abandoned children living rough on the streets and the poor state of the region’s education system, Foxcroft vowed to return and build a school for disadvantaged children. He also met an inspirational local head teacher, Grace Udua, who generously offered to donate her family land as the site for the school.

Upon return to the UK, Foxcroft and his wife Naomi set about raising the funds needed to help establish a model school. Safe Child Africa (then called Stepping Stones Nigeria) was registered as a charity with the UK Charity Commission in December 2005. Gary and Naomi then returned to Nigeria during 2006 to build the Stepping Stones Model School with support from the local community.

While living in Nigeria and working on the school, Gary and Naomi became aware of a number of children living on the streets who had been abandoned and abused due to the belief that they were "witches". They then began to work with local Nigerian NGOs to help to support these children and to campaign for their rights.

The work of the charity was featured in award-winning documentary from Dispatches. The documentary won a BAFTA, an Emmy and an Amnesty International award. This programme first aired on 12 November 2008 and told the story of young children who had been labeled witches and wizards by their family and community and left abandoned, tortured, imprisoned or killed in the delta state of Akwa Ibom in Nigeria. The programme followed the charity's founder Gary Foxcroft and the work they do rescuing and protecting children abused or at risk of abuse due to witchcraft accusations . The programme suggests that the problem is caused by a combination of African traditional beliefs and extreme Christian Pentecostal groups. In particular the programme singles out Liberty Foundation Gospel Ministries for producing a film called End of the Wicked, which the charity understand has contributed greatly to the increase in children being abandoned by their families and communities.


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