As part of the 100-city tour for The Future Awards Africa’s (TFAA) 10th
anniversary, the awards visited conflict zones across the North of
Nigeria last week – to highlight challenges,spotlight inspiring stories
and set up hubs to solve problems at scale.
The delegation was led by the co-founder of TFAA, Chude Jideonwo and
visited Chibok, Mubi and Yola. The tour, led by project managers Bukonla
Adebakin and Seun Oluyemi had previously visited Enugu, Banjul, Badagry,
Ibadan, Akure, Port Harcourt and Kano.
The tour has a three-pronged focus: a) re-focus attention on the
issuesyoung people are facing across the continent, b) the case studies
of how TFAA’s global brain trust has solved these issues and then c) set
up hubs in each city - made up of past winners, nominees, partners and
volunteers at community-levels – to solve these problems.
“The stories and the people we have met on this trip have confirmed some
of our worst fears, but more importantly also fired up our resolve,”
said Jideonwo after the tour. “There is so much work we have to do, and
we are building a network of problem solvers across the continent to
engage, solve and sustain the solutions to these problems.
“We are celebrating 10 years of TFAA, but more importantly, we are fired
up to begin 10 more years of building entrepreneurs, supporting change
makers and transforming societies.”
The one-year tour, which kicked off in October 2015, has now visited
Kano, Banjul, Port Harcourt, Ibadan, Enugu, Abuja, Lagos, Yola, Mubi and
Chibok.
“The challenges we saw on this tour are enough to make you worry,” said
Mohamed Diaby, a member of the Central Working Committee, from Abidjan.
“From young people feeling their own communities and countries to
communicable diseases from recused individuals coming back into town,
rebuilding of clinic/hospital, school, bridge and markets, education,
employment, drug use, to cities that urgently demand government
reconstruction, there is so much work left to be done. We are determined
to lead an army of young people, through our hubs, to do this urgent
work, to solve these problems.”
Hubs have now been set up in Mubi with the Initiative for Human Rights,
Yola with Centre for Caring, Empowerment and Peace Initiative (CCEPI)
and Chibok with the Red Cross. These hubs will work together with the
Global TFAA Secretariat to pull resources and media attention to solve
the identified problems in each community.
The next stop for the tour is Johannesburg, South Africa, after which
phase one of the tour will conclude.
The Future Awards Africa 2015 is powered by RED and held in partnership
with the Ford Foundation, Microsoft, the US Consulate, the Canadian High
Commission Nigeria and The Tony Elumelu Foundation. The event will be
hosted in Lagos on Sunday, 6 December, 2015.
Nice.
ReplyDeleteNice1
DeleteThat's nice. It's almost one year already?
ReplyDeleteLast year's own was fun.
Very nice.
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God bless them.
ReplyDelete