The attitude of seeing African Women role in
agriculture from the narrow view of women bh l 23lkkfarmers in the
villages, forgetting the multitude of women scientists and researchers
in agriculture in the continent.The Director of the African Women in Agricultural Research
and Development (AWARD), Dr. Wanjiru Kamau-Rutenberg, has said that the
continent cannot afford to neglect women scientists in its plan of
achieving food sufficiency.Speaking at a side event as part of the on-going African
Green Revolution Forum in Lusaka, Zambia, Wanjiru Kamau-Rutenberg said
for the continent to increase production and feed itself successfully
that it must harness all the resources at its disposal be it women or
men.“A few months ago when President Obama was in Kenya, he
said, ‘if you are playing a football match and you only put half of your
team on the field and leave half on the bench, you will lose the game
for sure’,” she said. “So why would Africa continue to play with only
half the team when we have available on this continent the intellectual
resources of women like this?”Wanjiru added that the question is how to unlock the
challenges facing the continent which requires the unity of purpose
between the men and women in feeding the continent.AWARD, according to her, provides fellowships to
strengthen the research and leadership skills of top women agricultural
scientists across sub-Saharan African. “465 African women scientists
have participated in the program since 2008, from Ethiopia, Ghana,
Kenya, Nigeria and Zambia among others.”She said AWARD is about unlocking the potentials in women
scientists that will change the agricultural research and development
sector and “most importantly, transforming the face and reality of
agriculture in Africa.”One of the awardees, Chapwa Kasoma, a plant breeder and
field supervisor with Dupont Pioneer in Zambia, shares her experience
on what she is currently doing as a researcher . She said she is
developing new varieties of groundnuts to address plant disease and
dangerous infestations with aflatoxins that are a major threat to food
and economic security for farmers in eastern Zambia.Chapwa Kasoma said that during her training with AWARD,
she was told to list her goals for the future. “The most amazing thing
is that the goals we set were actually achievable,” she said. Rhoda Mukuka, an AWARD fellow for 2011, said the program
has provided her and other fellows the opportunities to excel and
increase their visibilities through opportunities they have been
provided.She said they don’t just conduct research as women but
also translate their insights into practical applications that can make a
difference for Africa’s farmers.Rhoda , who was mentored and had mentored others, said
“each fellow is matched with a mentor, a respected male or female
scientist in her area of expertise.“She attends a Mentoring Orientation Workshop with her
mentor where they contract their goals for their year of working
together. After her year of being mentored, the fellow takes on a junior
scientist as her own mentee.”
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Lusaka
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Nigeria and Zambia
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President Obama
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Zambia
» Job Vacancy: Agricultural Scientist Are Needed…..
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