A new chapter in grassroots empowerment is unfolding in Nigeria as Mrs. Vera Nnadozie, founder of the Verachilly Women and Girl-Child Community Development Project, completed a high-impact visit that galvanized leaders, communities, and development partners across the country.
Nnadozie, accompanied by Co-Founder Mrs. Jamila Abari and Ambassador Nkiruka Okoronkwo, used the tour to expand partnerships, supervise ongoing projects, and deepen Verachilly’s reach into underserved communities.
Her agenda moved seamlessly from closed-door meetings with senior government officials to heartfelt outreach in orphanages and rural communities, reflecting a strategy that bridges policy influence with tangible, on-the-ground support.

“Empowering women and girls is not just a program—it’s the key to Nigeria’s future,” Nnadozie told journalists in Abuja. “When women and children thrive, entire communities rise.”
In Abuja, the team held pivotal discussions with Adamu Samb, Director of Gender Affairs at the Ministry of Women Affairs, and Dr. Sarah David Areo, Diaspora Focal Point Director, to integrate Verachilly’s programs into federal development platforms.
Talks focused on vocational training, entrepreneurship opportunities, maternal health, and leveraging Nigeria’s diaspora networks for sustainable funding and expertise.
The delegation’s visit to Abuja Children’s Home was a poignant moment, as Nnadozie and Abari listened to children’s stories and shared words of encouragement. In Karu and Jiwa, they engaged traditional rulers and women leaders, tailoring Verachilly’s microcredit schemes and girl-child literacy programs to community-specific needs.

At the National Women Development Centre and National Women Council, directors praised Verachilly’s model of pairing global best practices with indigenous knowledge, agreeing to collaborate on scaling vocational training and mentorship networks nationwide.
Nnadozie confirmed that Verachilly will replicate its most successful pilot projects across all six geo-political zones, ensuring every region benefits from scholarships, maternal health initiatives, and small-business support schemes.
She also unveiled plans for a national mentorship network to connect emerging female leaders with seasoned advocates.
Stakeholders hailed the visit as a turning point. Women leaders spoke of renewed optimism, children expressed joy at being remembered, and traditional rulers welcomed Verachilly’s inclusive approach.
As she concluded the tour, Nnadozie vowed:
“This is only the beginning. Together—with government, communities, and the diaspora—we will build stronger families, resilient communities, and brighter futures for Nigeria’s women and children.”
With expanded alliances and a clear national strategy, the Verachilly Women and Girl-Child Community Development Project is poised to become one of Nigeria’s most influential forces for inclusive growth and social transformation.
