Inclusion is not just a nice thing to do, it is the right thing to do and a key success factor that the business community and country leadership should embrace.
With lockdown, office work was taken away, school became home based, Church was limited to a few, and this means that families have to contend with spending much time at home. Cruel, as it is, this disease has awakened family consciousness, and hopefully this could endure past the pandemic.
She gained popularity through the Churchill show and has maintained relevance through creativity and consistency in creating content.
At the age 25, she lived in Nairobi, Kenya. In 1975, a growing women's movement in Kenya motivated her to take her three children and leave what she has described as an abusive marriage. Her marriage to Roy Kachele ended in 1981
Even though she didn't obviously align with Magufuli's proposal to ban young mothers from returning to school after giving birth, she didn't counter him publicly. It should be remembered that in 2005 when she was the minister of labor, gender development and children in Zanzibar, she overturned a similar ban.
There is no makeup as powerful as having multiple sources of income. It is just so empowering knowing that you have economic value outside of your day job or paycheck.
We are in the Covid 19 times. When it hit, it hit hard and so many things were destabilized. The economies, education, careers ... name them. For the first time in many decades, the whole world was brought to its knees. Many died the actual death and many others died internally. Still, there are those who kept hope alive and turned things around.
The platform is an information and networking hub for women which provides a one-stop shop for them to start, grow and scale up their businesses and to access financial and non-financial services.
As a world cancer leader, Dr. Mutebi will provide global, continental and regional representation for a period of two years (2021 – 2022) and will be key to directing the discourse around cancer management and policy in the future. As the first African Oncologist to hold this position she will be key in ensuring that the voice of the African patient is heard.
Africa has produced and continues to produce great women who are ready to take up the continent.