News

March 7, 2026

Family Rebuilders Outreach urges women to focus on positive impact, reaches female inmates

Family Rebuilders Outreach urges women to focus on positive impact, reaches female inmates

By Chinonso Alozie

A non-governmental organisation, Family Rebuilders Outreach (FRO), has called on women to adopt a structured mindset aimed at making meaningful and positive contributions to society.

The organisation also extended its humanitarian outreach to female inmates at the Owerri Correctional Centre as part of activities marking the International Women’s Day celebration.

Founder of the organisation, Mrs. Beatrice Anachuna, made this known while delivering an address during the commemoration event. She said the initiative was designed to encourage women to pursue purposeful living while strengthening their roles within the family and society.

According to Anachuna, Family Rebuilders Outreach is a family-focused development organisation dedicated to strengthening homes, empowering women, and raising confident children.

She explained that the programme reflects the organisation’s belief that strong families form the foundation of a thriving society, noting that empowering women with structure, clarity, and support can transform homes, communities, and the nation at large.

“Family Rebuilders Outreach is committed to rebuilding and strengthening families as the foundation of a healthy society,” she said.

“Our mission is rooted in the belief that when women are strengthened, families flourish, and when families flourish, nations become stronger.”

Anachuna added that through mentorship programmes, empowerment training, community interventions, and humanitarian outreach, the organisation continues to advocate for stronger families and resilient communities.

As part of the event, participants attended an “Efficiency Reset Session for Women” led by leadership strategist and development expert, Chinedu Nwagu.

Speaking on the topic, “The Structured Woman: Increasing Efficiency in the Pursuit of Our Dreams and Our Ministry as Mothers,” Nwagu urged women to move beyond mere activity and embrace intentional and structured living.

He introduced practical frameworks for managing time, energy, attention, and support systems, which he said could help women effectively balance family responsibilities, personal development, business, and ministry without experiencing burnout.

Participants described the session as a transformative experience that provided practical tools for building purposeful lives while nurturing their families.

Following the training session, members of the organisation visited the Owerri Correctional Centre, where they donated self-care and personal hygiene kits to female inmates as part of their outreach programme marking International Women’s Day.

The donated items included soap, sponges, toothpaste, toothbrushes, sanitary pads, and petroleum jelly. The outreach, according to the organisers, was aimed at showing compassion and support to incarcerated women while promoting dignity and wellbeing.