• A new finding now shows that women are now taking the lead in the transformation of Africa as the continent makes tremendous progress driving gender parity
  • Zuri Foundation Chief Executive Officer Norah Muthoni Mumo said the past three years have seen an increase in women’s participation in societal transformation
  • Accelerating progress towards gender parity could boost African economies by the equivalent of 10 per cent of their collective GDP by 2025

A new finding by Zuri Foundation indicates that women are now taking the lead in the transformation of Africa as the continent makes tremendous progress driving gender parity.

Zuri Foundation Chief Executive Officer Norah Muthoni Mumo said the past three years had seen an increase in women’s participation towards societal transformation in various fields, including political leadership, senior managerial positions, entrepreneurship, and sports and culture.

“More women are now in political leadership positions; women in corporate boards in Kenya stand at 36 per cent, exceeding the global average of 23 per cent. There are now more women leading SMEs and building brands that are changing lives,” she explained.

Mumo noted that gender inequality remains high across the continent despite the improvement in world comparison.

Accelerating progress towards gender parity could boost African economies by the equivalent of 10 per cent of their collective GDP by 2025.

The Kenyan case

Mumo said women and adolescent girls are the most vulnerable group in Kenya.

She noted that their poverty levels, especially at the household and community, are exacerbated by gender-based violence, harmful cultural attitudes and beliefs around gender roles, norms and female empowerment.

“Limited control over benefits from land and other resources constrains women’s successful participation in the economy, particularly as producers and market actors. Women’s unpaid childcare and domestic work limits their contribution and benefit from productive activities, constrain their mobility, and limit their access to market resources and information while participating in the economy,” Mumo noted.

Mumo was speaking during the 2022 Zuri Awards, where 15 women were awarded in various categories that include: agriculture, innovation, STEM, humanitarian, arts & culture, media, renewable energy, manufacturing, public service, sports, health care, young achiever, finance, business and education.

The award received over 250 submissions, with three women nominated in each category.

She spoke during the 2022 Zuri Awards ceremony held in Nairobi.

https://theexchange.africa/east-africa/celebrating-womenkcb-leads-region-in-gender-parity/

The nominees went through a thorough vetting process that included training and pitching to a panel of jurors who made the final decision.

Among the winners of the night were Athena Morgen, the founder of DigiSpace Safety, who was given the innovation award while Judie Kihumba scooped the healthcare award.

Amina Haider the founder of JIKO Manufacturing Incubation Facility took the manufacturing award as Sharon Korir won the humanitarian award for helping women suffering from Fistula in Kenya. Ruth Samoei was recognised in the public service category for her role in facilitating disadvantaged deaf communities to favourably compete for available business opportunities in an already saturated market.

In the young achiever’s category, Marie Claire Wangari was awarded for her work at Reproductive and Sexual health Programme for Kenyan Teenagers (RESPEKT) while Rukia Sebit was honoured in the education category.

Other winners include Annrose Gathara in the Agriculture Category, Ellie Lalaikipiain in the Arts and Culture category, Nasenyana Adoket in the finance category, and Anna Gaitha in the business Deborah Kisongochi, Ann Nyakinyua Gathura in the STEM category and Rael Otieno in the sports category.

“Zuri Awards’ celebration of excellence among the unsung names, across the 15 categories is progress towards how the world should and can be. It’s the recognition of the gut feeling that says, ‘You don’t have to wait for the world to start. You have the vision to create the narrative.’ Everyone in this room is a winner because you all took the first step towards progress and making a difference,” said Margaret Kobia, Cabinet Secretary, Ministry of Public Service and Gender.

The 2022 Awards had a new category dubbed digital resilience award, sponsored by Meta. The award sought to recognise women business owners who pivoted to digital during the Covid-19 pandemic. Naom Monari won this category.

Other award partners include EABL, Tusker Malt, Tanqueray, Safaricom , Citizen,Hot 96 , Radio ,Junction , NRSA , UN Women , EU , and Multichoice.Zuri Awards was inaugurated six years ago and has had over 600 submissions, 125

Nominees, 52 Honorees, KES 20 Million raised, 10 Trade Linkages and 15 Award Categories.

Zuri Foundation was founded by Go Gaga Experiential in 2021 to champion women change-makers through Zuri Awards, trade linkages, training and mentorship, fundraising and women launch Pad.

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Wanjiku Njuguna is a Kenyan-based business reporter with experience of more than eight years.

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