Ngozi Okonjo Iweala, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Joyce Banda among five
others were recently listed as Africa’s ruling ladies by CNN.
The series focused on power women who are taking center stage in
Africa’s politics and occupying positions of power across the continent.
Here is what CNN had to say about three of them:
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
She is Nigeria’s finance minister and gained world wide
prominence with her candidacy bid to head the World Bank earlier this
year.Born in 1954 in a village in Nigeria’s Delta State, Okonjo-Iweala
went to the United States in 1972 for studies at Harvard University and
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.In 1982, she started her
career at the World Bank, working her way up to become a senior
executive. A respected economist, she became Nigeria’s first female
finance minister in 2003 and the country’s first female foreign minister
in 2006.She was a key figure in President Olusegun Obasanjo’s cabinet
between 2003-06 and helped to broker a deal with the Paris Club to write
off $18bn of Nigeria’s debt. She also cracked down on corruption during
her tenure.Okonjo-Iweala returned to the World Bank in 2007 to become
its managing director before being re-appointed as Nigeria’s minister of
finance last year.
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Liberia |
The first woman to be democratically elected as head of state in an
African country, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has been the president of Liberia
since 2006.Faced with the Herculean task of rebuilding a country
devastated by 14-years of civil war, which killed an estimated 250,000
people, Johnson Sirleaf declared a zero-tolerance policy against
corruption and made education compulsory and free for all primary-age
children.An economist by profession, she also used her contacts in the
international business world to persuade Liberia’s creditors to forgive
some of the West African country’s crushing foreign debt.The 73-year-old
Harvard graduate, whose political resilience and tough reputation have
earned her the nickname “Iron Lady,” was one of three recipients of the
2011 Nobel Prize for Peace, in recognition of her efforts to further
women’s rights.
Joyce Banda, Malawi |
Joyce Banda was sworn in as president of Malawi in April, becoming the
first female head of state of the landlocked country in southeastern
Africa.A longtime women’s rights activist, Banda studied briefly in the
United States and eventually founded several organizations, including
the Joyce Banda Foundation, which educates girls and provides care for
orphans, many of them HIV-positive.She also created the Young Women
Leaders Network and the Hunger Project.Banda was awarded the Africa
Prize for Leadership for the Sustainable End of Hunger in 1997 for
founding the National Association of Business Women of Malawi, aimed at
making women economically self-reliant.You can view the full list of all
8 women here.
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