DAKAR,Senegal, 13 April 2017, African Media
Agency (AMA)/- The fearless Gambian human rights activist won New
African Woman magazine's Woman of the Year Award at the Award ceremony
that took place in Dakar last night. Fatoumatta Jallow-Tambajan was
instrumental in galvanising the opposition that eventually beat
long-term now exiled leader Yahya Jammeh.
Held at a glitzy Gala
Dinner at the Terrou-Bi hotel in the Senegalese capital Dakar on 12
April and the Awards, now in their second edition, recognise, celebrate
and honour African women who have made exceptional impact and change
in their countries or communities in the past 12 months.
Nigeria's
Amina J. Mohammed - the new United Nations Deputy Secretary - took home
the New African Woman in Politics and Public Office. Prior to her new
post, she served as Minister of Environment. But she has played key
roles in both the current Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), on how both agendas impact Africa -
more so its women.
Winners have been selected by a special
panel of judges from 68 shortlisted candidates across 12 categories.
The Award for Women in Health, Science and Technology went to Namibia's
Dr Helena Ndume - a pioneering ophthalmologist and cataract surgeon, who
has to date, performed over 35,000 sight-restoring surgeries on
Namibians, completely free of charge.
Morocco saw serial
entrepreneur Salwa Idrissi Akhannouch, take home the New African woman
Award in Business. Zimbabwean philathropists and educationist Tsitsi
Masiyiwa, received the New African Woman Award in Education for her work
with Higherlife Foundation - a not for profit organisation she runs and
offers scholarships to orphaned and vulnerable children to give them a
better chance in education. Over 250,000 children have benefited from
the work of Higherlife Foundation.
The much-talked about New
African Woman on the Rise (The Next Generation) - a category which
received the most nominations - went to the Kenyan girls rights
activist and UN Women youth advisor Vivian Onano.
The New
African Woman in Civil Society was given to Chief Theresa Kachindamoto,
who annulled over 300 child marriages in her village in Malawi, a feat
that played an important role in forcing the government to ban child
marriages in the country all together.
Other winners were Nigeria's
Joan Okorodudu (New African Woman In The Arts & Culture) for her
services to raising the profile of African models and fashion; Mali's
Binta Touré Ndoye (New African Woman - in Finance); Amira Yahyaoui of
Tunisia (New African Woman in Media) and the former African Union
Commissioner Agriculture and Rural Development Tumusiime Rhoda Peace
from Uganda, is the New African Woman in Agriculture for pushing the
importance of food security and adding value chain to African goods
while she was at the AU.
The New African Woman in Sport went to the
Senegal's Fatma Samoura - the world football body's Secretary General -
a position she was appointed to in 2016, becoming the first African
woman to hold the post.
The New African Woman Awards is followed by a Forum on 13 April, under the theme Changing The Game.
Distributed by African Media Agency (AMA) on behalf of the New African Woman Forum Awards.
Hakuna maoni :
Chapisha Maoni