Showing posts with label Leadership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leadership. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Innovating Africa: Verone Mankou Creator of Africa's First Tablet Computer


Verone Mankou. 26 years old inventor from the Congo-Brazaville is the genius creator behind the Way-C tablet computer. The tablet is called the Way-C - "the light of the stars" in a dialect of northern Congo.


Currently you can only purchase the Way-C from Airtel Congo stores in Brazzaville and Pointe-Noire, a private mobile telephone company which is a subsidiary of the Indian group Bharti.
The Way-C will cost you US $299!

Read More Here VMK Official Website

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Dalumuzi Mhlanga- Leading Zimbabwe Youths

Dalumuzi Mhlanga is an undergraduate student at Harvard University and founder of Lead Us Today, a non-profit organization in Zimbabwe whose mission is to inspire, mobilize and empower young people to work together beyond socioeconomic barriers so that they can lead community development efforts. He did his high school at Mzingwane High School in Zimbabwe and later attended Waterford Kamhlaba United World College of Southern Africa in Swaziland. He is passionate about African history and how it has shaped the way in which countries on the continent approach a globalizing world. He hopes to continue working with young people and building their capacity to lead and make a difference as they Lead Us Today. In his free time, he enjoys chatting with people, laughing with people and dancing alone.

Read More Here http://www.forbes.com

http://www.leadustoday.com/

Monday, January 9, 2012

Orie Rogo Manduli --- Believing in One Self



Wherever I am, I am a LEADER. throw me in the DESERT, and I'll be leading the SAND. Yeah, throw me in the WATER and I'll be leading the FISH ...
Orie Rogo Manduli .

NEWSMAKERS: Focus on 'Iron Lady', Orie Rogo Manduli. Manduli: I've fought and won many battles. We crown Newsmakers for the year 2011 with the story of a woman who has continued to fascinate many, not only by her unique sense of style and fashion, but also by her outspoken character that has seen her politically wrestle it out with men for various leadership positions. A former model and rally driver, she has done what most women would consider taboo and what many men term as too aggressive, coming from a woman. But for a woman who at only 19 was a divorced mother of 3...she says she has no apologies to make, and hopes her story remains symbolic in the continued fight for gender equality. Here's Evelyn Wambui with tonight's Newsmaker, the one and only, Ambassador Orie Rogo Manduli.

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

President Kagame appears on Mindspeak show- Kigali, Rwanda

President Kagame appeared on Mindspeak show, hosted by Aly Khan Stachu, CEO of Rich Management. Aly Sanchu invited President Kagame to speak in his show via Twitter!!!!twitter bird 2 60+ Ways To Increase Your Twitter Followers

Monday, September 26, 2011

So Long Wangari Maathai!!!

Wangari Muta Maathai
1 April 1940 – 25 September 2011
Kenyan environmental + political activist + custodian of Nature
First African woman to be awarded the Nobel prize for peace 2004
Founder of The Green Belt Movement


"MAMA EARTH" Wangari. You fought for green B4 it was cool. R.I.P"

Jamhuri Wear

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Somaliland President Siilanyo Monitoring Progress First Hand


While in southern Somalia Al Shabaab are busy blusting away small surveillance aircraft aka drones, in the north Somaliland President Siilanyo accompanied by the first lady, Presidential Minster, Somaliland Chief of Police and the deputy director of Somaliland Intelligence, were spotted on Friday September 23rd strolling different parts of Hargeisa, the capital.

Read more here http://somalilandpress.com/unguarded-somaliland-president-takes-a-stroll-in-town-23885

Friday, September 16, 2011

At 27 Kingwa Kamenchu Is Ready For The Presidential Seat



A 27 year old Kenyan student from Oxford University has become the latest entrant in the now seemingly crowded 2012 presidential race. In announcing her intentions, Kingwa Kamenchu says that what she lacks in age and experience she makes up in a passion and determination to improve the lives of ordinary Kenyans. Evelyn Wambui tells us about a young poet and writer's dream to change not just the face but also the style of leadership in Kenya.

More grease to your elbows girl!!!!

Friday, April 22, 2011

Should African Countries Dollarise?

Zimbabwe's inflation eased in March to 2.7 per cent, down from 3.0 per cent in February, thanks to lower prices for telecommunications and medicine, the government said Friday.

The southern African country suffered a decade of runaway prices amid hyperinflation.

The economy stabilised after the government abandoned the worthless local currency in 2009, allowing trade in US dollars and other major foreign currencies.

The formation of a power-sharing government in 2009 by the main political rivals President Robert Mugabe and Morgan Tsvangirai has also brought stability to the economy.

But foreign investors have maintained a wait-and-see stance amid concerns over new equity regulations which seek to give locals majority stakes in foreign-owned companies.

Read more here http://www.africareview.com/

Thursday, April 14, 2011

DEMOCRACY AND GOOD GOVERNANCE IN AFRICA



Kenyan prime minister Raila Odinga spoke at CSIS about the “democracy deadlock” in Africa. During an event hosted by CSIS Africa Program deputy director Richard Downie, the prime minister stated that the democratization movement of the 1990s is being undermined by a new pattern of failing elections. Reversing this trend is of paramount importance, he said, given that 21 African nations are heading to the polls in 2011. Mr. Odinga said he had learned from personal experience that power-sharing governments are not a viable solution to disputed election outcomes.

The prime minister discussed the recent election crisis in Cote d’Ivoire, comparing it to the contentious 2007 election in Kenya. Mr. Odinga had urged the losing candidate, Laurent Gbagbo, to step aside, but Gbagbo refused to put his country ahead of his personal ambition.

Despite Africa’s election crises, Mr. Odinga said he remains an Afro-optimist and is confident that the will of the people will prevail with the help of civil society and the rising middle class.

Read more here http://csis.org

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Making Health Progress: Clinic for Neurophysiology in Hargeisa


Essa Kayd, a chief neurodiagnostic specialist of Somaliland origin based in Boston, U.S. announced he will be opening a state of the art Clinic for neurophysiology in Somaliland’s capital, Hargeisa. The clinic will be a joint investment between Kayd and Ethiopia’s leading neurologist Dr. Sisay Gizaw from Addis Ababa Medical School. Kayd received his education in Ottawa University and Harvard Medical School. Mr. Kayd is the chief Neurodiagnostic at Brigham and Women’s Hospital Harvard Medical School in Boston. He occasionally travels to Africa to offer his time; gives training to leading doctors in the continent. He is also trains physicians at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Medical School. Brigham and Women’s Medical Hospital is ranked one of the top hospitals in the US by U.S. News & World Report Top Hospitals. He has been helping Addis Ababa’s main hospital for the past several months, where he noticed most of their patients were Somalis who had travelled miles for the treatment. He opened his first clinic in Addis Ababa early this year and plans to open one in Hargeisa in early April. Before they open their clinic, the two doctors will be offering three day neurodiagnostics training at Edna Adan Hospital in Hargeisa. Interested individuals are advised to call Edna Hospital or contact Dr Essa Kayd Email: Kayd_1@hotmail.com or Tel: 1-617-304-1270

Read more here http://somalilandpress.com/

SOUTH AFRICA'S LOW QUALITY EDUCATION AS A POVERTY TRAP

An interesting research paper that summarises some of the main findings from a large research project undertaken by the Social Policy Research Group in the Department of Economics at Stellenbosch University.


The research that this document reports on considers how the low quality of tuition offered in schools in poor communities can entrench exclusion and marginalisation. Within this system of overlapping divides, most of these categories cannot be transcended easily. Race is a social construct but a sticky one, while language and culture are, to a large extent, also social identities into which you are born. Moving to a more affluent neighbourhood is not a reliable strategy to escape poverty, as it tends to be the consequence of social mobility rather than the cause of it. This leaves education as the only viable avenue for poor people who want to enter the top end of the labour market, with all its attendant economic benefits. Education therefore has a significant role to play both in providing opportunities to individuals as well as through its potential to unravel the apartheid-era social structure and create a more cohesive and less polarised society.
Thus, while there is much scope for education to challenge and transform individual lives and social structures, at least in principle, this study demonstrates why we are seeing so little evidence of this. Our research shows that by the age of eight there are already very large gaps in the performance of school children in the top 20% of the population (top quintile) versus those in the bottom 80% (bottom four quintiles). In other words, by an early age there are already stark distinctions between the prospects of children from poorer communities and those from more affluent communities.
According to our research, the education system generally produces outcomes that reinforce current patterns of poverty and privilege instead of challenging them. Unsurprisingly, we find that the inequalities in schooling outcomes manifest via labour market outcomes, perpetuating current patterns of income inequality.



Read more here http://www.mg.co.za/uploads/2011/03/29/low-quality-educ-as-poverty-trap-report.pdf

Friday, March 18, 2011

Keeping Up with the Qaddafis

The Foreign Policy magazine has an interesting piece on the Qaddafis...


"The family that fights the United Nations together, stays together."

The article mentions Aisha Qaddafis only daughter and a lawyer, was appointed as a goodwill ambassador to the United Nations in July 2009, focusing on the issues of HIV/AIDS and violence against women in Libya. She was fired from that position on Feb. 23, following the beginning of the violent crackdown on anti-government protestors.

Such events are mind boggling! Why didn't they(UN) do their due diligence before bestowing upon her the ambassadorial role?


Read more here http://www.foreignpolicy.com

Friday, March 4, 2011

Youth organisations ask "What About Us?" of Nigerian presidential candidates



Mission

Facilitating a debate that focuses on the key issues affecting a critical voting demographic, with the age group of 30 and under representing 70% of the population. The debate will be a direct conversation with Nigerian youth, inviting presidential candidates to answer questions posed by young Nigerians in Nigeria and around the world via social media networks including Facebook and Twitter, texts and phones, about key topics of concern.


What they seek to do:

Building on momentum from a mass voter registration drive, a coalition of several youth empowerment groups and blogs, including Vote or Quench, Enough is Enough Nigeria coalition, Sleeves Up, and Nigerian Leadership Initiative, is calling for the first-ever presidential youth centered debate in Nigeria. Looking ahead to the April elections, the debate would focus on the key issues affecting a critical voting demographic, with the age group of 30 and under representing 70% of the population.

The debate will be a direct conversation with Nigerian youth, inviting presidential candidates to answer questions posed by young Nigerians in Nigeria and around the world via social media networks including Facebook and Twitter, texts and phones, about key topics of concern. For the first time, the candidates will have platform to share their agenda with the nation in a live-televised format, laying out specific and concrete solutions. The debate is tentatively scheduled for the last week of March, 2011.

"It is easy for politicians to promise change without having a clue about the realities Nigerian youth face every day. However, we know that their decisions now will largely determine our future so we want to know where they stand. This time around, we are engaged, aware and empowered, and believe that our vote should be earned and not expected,” the group said in a joint statement.

Read more here http://www.whataboutusnigeria.org

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Presidents Setting Bad Precedents

The Case of Two Presidents, One Country

Côte d'Ivoire aka Ivory Coast



Laurent Koudou Gbagbo
vs
Alassane Dramane Ouattara







The double executive power situation in Côte d'Ivoire seems to have inspired the opposition in Gabon as well...on January 26 2011, former candidate to the Gabonese presidential election Bruno Ben Moubamba announced on his blog that André Mba Obame, another candidate to the same election and regarded by many as the probable winner of the 2009 election, has taken oath as president and formed his own government (fr).

Gabon




Ali Bongo Ondimba
vs
André Mba Obame







Read more http://globalvoicesonline.org/2011/01/26/gabon-opposition-leader-takes-oath-as-new-president/

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Inspiration-Frannie Léautier on Leading Across Boundaries

Panelist Frannie Léautier MS, PhD from Tanzania is the CEO of the African Capacity Building Foundation ACBF, which is a Foundation providing grants, advisory services, technical assistance and knowledge services in the area of capacity development in Africa, with programs in 45 countries.


Monday, February 21, 2011

Monday, February 14, 2011

The April 6th Youth Movement -Egypts Youth Activist Group

The Facebook group The April 6 Movement has been the catalyst of the current political upheaval shaking up the government of Hosni Mubarak. Formed around three years ago, the loosely organized social network forum & movement was started by young activists Ahmed Maher and Ahmed Salah in order to mobilize support for striking industrial workers El-Mahalla El-Kubra. They wanted to organize people to support the cause of the workers, who were planning a strike April 6, 2008.

The events in Tunisia in January and its success inspired the youth groups in Egypt galvanizing change.

According to AlJazeera news broadcast, April 6th Youth Movement founders sought inspiration and advise from the Otpor! (meaning Resistance) Movement a student led uprising that led to the overthrow of dictator Slobodan Milošević in 2000.

Otpor! advice on the key to success:

  • Unity
  • Discipline
  • Planning
  • Avoid violence in any way
  • Keep people engaged with chants and slogans
  • Be clear in their aims/goals






April 6th Youth Movement mission as stated on their Face book Page: We are a group of Egyptian Youth from different backgrounds, age and trends gathered for a whole year since the renewal of hope in 6 April 2008 in the probability of mass action in Egypt which allowed all kind of youth from different backgrounds, society classes all over Egypt to emerge from the crisis and reach for the democratic future that overcomes the case of occlusion of political and economic prospects that the society is suffering from these days. Most of us did not come from a political background, nor participated in political or public events before 6 April 2008 but we were able to control and determine our direction through a whole year of practice.


Read more April 6th Youth Movement Facebook Page

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Undying Quest for Education




The undying quest of children in one vast part of the country and the story of determination from the harsh terrains of Turkana all in the quest for education.

Friday, February 4, 2011

The Demise of Authoritarian Regimes in Northern Africa?

The year 2011 is one that will go down in the history books as the year in which the leadership apparatus in Tunisia and Egypt got tested, sending the despotic leader packing in the former. The youth have not been left behind and are in the forefront of the unveiling events. They have been successful in mobilizing and organizing themselves as activists in a quest for change and demanding their rights.

Will the rest of the African continent witness similar events? Can they succeed?

Elsewhere in the news...

Inspired by the revolution in Tunisia, Egyptian youths are leading ongoing protests in their own country. Thousands of Egyptians have taken to the streets across the country, demanding political change. So, how do young Egyptians view the protests and are they hopeful that change will come?

The demands on the street of Egypt: "Bread, Freedom and Human Dignity! that capture the aspiration and hopes of the people"





Al Jazeera English: Live Stream - Watch Now - Al Jazeera English

When Hosni Mubarak, then an aloof young military officer, returned to his Nile Delta hometown to bury his mother he was so disliked, according to residents, he was told to find another burial site....Once a small village from where a young Mubarak would set out every morning to attend school several kilometres away, Kafr el-Moseilha is now a large neighbourhood of the sprawling city of Shibin el-Kom...."I won’t lie. Some here felt sadness to see him leave the way they did. They think his dignity was part of theirs. But the youth, they didn’t think: ‘Oh, he’s from here’. They were only thinking of freedom,” Shirbani says.Mubarak, born in 1928, left the village to go to military academy, from where he ascended to become air force chief and finally president. He would never return to visit, the residents complain. “He never identified with the village, he had no roots here,” Mr Shirbani says. “Mubarak always dealt with life like a pilot — always up in the air and distant from the people below. This wouldn’t have happened to him if he weren’t so distant,” said Mr Nabawi. “Mubarak didn’t like to flatter. As a person, I think he hated corruption, the corruption came with the new generation brought in over the past 10 years,” said Mustapha al-Fikki. http://www.nation.co.ke/


Opposition figure Mohamed ElBaradei presses the US to abandon Hosni Mubarak.
Mubarak Dissolves Government, Promises New One
http://allafrica.com/stories/201101281014.html

BBC Live Updates on Egypts Unrest
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/9380534.stm

Revolt on Egypt Streets
http://www.newsweek.com/2011/01/29/revolt-on-egypt-s-streets.html

Egypt's President Hosni Mubarak has named intelligence chief Omar Suleiman as his first ever vice-president as he struggles to regain control of the country. Aviation Minister Ahmed Shafiq has also been appointed as prime minister.Tens of thousands of protesters defied the curfew to remain on the streets, despite army warnings.
Read more: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-12316465

With a deep investment in the status quo, Israel is watching what a senior official calls "an earthquake in the Middle East" with growing concern. ..."We believe that Egypt is going to overcome the current wave of demonstrations, but we have to look to the future," says the minister in the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Israel enjoys diplomatic relations and security cooperation with both Egypt and Jordan, the only neighboring states that have signed treaties with the Jewish state.
Read more: http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2044929,00.html#ixzz1CSiDnAea

Egyptian protesters' makeshift helmets – in pictures http://www.guardian.co.uk



Mubarak & son have resigned from Egypts Ruling party

An 18-day-old revolt led by the young people of Egypt ousted President Hosni Mubarak on Friday,{February 11, 2011} shattering three decades of political stasis here and overturning the established order of the Arab world. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/02/12/world/middleeast/12egypt.html


Chartered Accountant, Mohamed Kassem...“Tonight I am very, very happy. Before I didn't want to be Egyptian, now I'm proud to be Egyptian..."
http://www.africanews.com/site/Euphoria_in_Cairo_as_Mubarak_steps_down/list_messages/37450


Hosni Mubarak Timeline

May 4, 1928 – Born in a village in Egypt's Nile Delta.

Oct 6, 1981 – Thrust into office when Islamists gun down President Anwar Sadat at a military parade. He is approved as president in a referendum in November and re-elected in October 1987 and October 1993.

June 26, 1995 – Gunmen attack his car as he arrives at an African summit in Addis Ababa. He is unhurt.

Oct 5, 1999 – Sworn in as president for his fourth term and names Atef Obeid as prime minister after the government led by Kamal Ganzouri resigns.

Dec 22, 1999 – Egypt agrees to sell its natural gas through what Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak's office dubs a "Pipeline of Peace".

March 2005 – Street protests by the Kefaya (Enough) Movement draw hundreds across Egypt to oppose a fifth term for Mr Mubarak or any attempt to install his son Gamal in his place.

May 11, 2005 – Parliament votes to change the constitution to allow contested presidential elections.

Sept 27, 2005 – Mr Mubarak is sworn in for a fifth consecutive term after winning the first contested presidential election on Sept 7. Rival Ayman Nour is the only member of parliament to remain seated during the ceremony, apparently to show his refusal to accept the official vote count.

Dec 8, 2005 – The Muslim Brotherhood increase their seats in parliament to 88 after an election marred by violence, but Mr Mubarak's party retains a big majority. Eight people were killed on the last day of voting on Dec 7.

Nov 19, 2006 – Mr Mubarak says he will retain his responsibilities for the rest of his life.

June 4, 2009 – US President Barack Obama in a speech in Cairo calls for a "new beginning" in ties between Washington and the Islamic world.

March 26, 2010 – Former U.N. nuclear chief Mohamed ElBaradei makes first public appearance after his return to Egypt in February.

March 27, 2010 – Mr Mubarak returns to Egypt to reassume presidential powers after three weeks recovering from gallbladder surgery in Germany.

Jan 25, 2011 – Street protests begin after an online campaign calling for an end to Mr Mubarak's rule.

Feb 11, 2011 – Mr Mubarak steps down on the 18th day of protests that have killed an estimated 300 people.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/egypt/8319299/Hosni-Mubarak-timeline.html

For the interesting and Inspiring Egypt protest signs from around the world visit here http://awe.sm/5G0zz
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