Master’s student in Life Sciences (LiSE), Ms. Winfrida Makirita (second left), explaining to the EAC delegation and other observers, about the benefits of medicinal plants for the treatment of stomach pains and fungus, and as a component for mosquito repellent.
Amb. Dr. Richard Sezibera, EAC Secretary General (left), being greeted upon arrival to NM-AIST grounds by the Institution’s Vice Chancellor, Prof. Burton Mwamila.
Amb. Dr. Richard Sezibera, Secretary General of the East African Community (EAC) yesterday paid a courtesy visit to the Nelson Mandela African Institution of Science and Technology (NM-AIST) . He was accompanied by Mr. Aloysius Chebet, EAC Principle Education Officer and Ms. Alice Maro, EAC Communications Expert.
At the occasion, Prof. Burton Mwamila, NN-AIST Vice Chancellor, expressed his gratitude to the Secretary General for taking time off his busy schedule to visit to the Institution. After his opening remarks, Prof. Mwamila gave an overview presentation on NM-AIST to the EAC delegates, and some 150 attendees comprising of NM-AIST faculty staff members and students.
During his keynote address Amb. Sezibera commended the Government of the United Republic of Tanzania for investing in the establishment of the Institution.
He further urged leaders of other EAC Partner States to also support NM-AIST, so as to “further develop it into a Regional hub where brilliant and great minds of East African sons and daughters can experiment and transform their innovative ideas into real solutions and products for the economic transformation of the region and the continent at large.”
At the occasion, Prof. Burton Mwamila, NN-AIST Vice Chancellor, expressed his gratitude to the Secretary General for taking time off his busy schedule to visit to the Institution. After his opening remarks, Prof. Mwamila gave an overview presentation on NM-AIST to the EAC delegates, and some 150 attendees comprising of NM-AIST faculty staff members and students.
During his keynote address Amb. Sezibera commended the Government of the United Republic of Tanzania for investing in the establishment of the Institution.
He further urged leaders of other EAC Partner States to also support NM-AIST, so as to “further develop it into a Regional hub where brilliant and great minds of East African sons and daughters can experiment and transform their innovative ideas into real solutions and products for the economic transformation of the region and the continent at large.”
Further into his speech, the Secretary General talked about alarming numbers of science and engineering graduates in Africa, currently standing at 35 scientists and engineers per million inhabitants. He attributes this low figure to the ever-growing brain drain of the well-educated and skilled populations, as well as to the low GDP spending by African governments on Research and Development (R&D). Only three countries in Africa spend one percent of their GDP on R&D: Uganda, Malawi and South Africa.
The Secretary General was taken on a campus tour of NM-AIST where he visited the laboratory complex to further identify areas of collaboration for the two institutions.
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