VICE-PRESIDENT
Samia Suluhu Hassan addresses participants when she launched the Female
Future Tanzania Programme that aims at mobilising talent for women in
Dar es Salaam yesterday. (Photo by VPO)
VICE President (VP), Samia Suluhu Hassan has asked the private sector to work closely with the government to ensure that women are involved in all stages of economic growth starting from providing tertiary services to being at the decision making tables.
“Knowing what we know about the role of
women in driving macroeconomic growth, and how women can contribute to
sustainable growth and development, it is clear that we must make far
better use of women in the workforce especially in corporate board
rooms.
The VP was speaking yesterday in Dar es
Salaam at the launch of the Female Future Programme that aims at
attracting more women into leading positions and on Boards of Directors
of Companies.
The Programme is coordinated by the
Association of Tanzania Employers (ATE), in collaboration with the
Confederation of Norwegian Enterprise (NHO).
Officiating the launching of the
programme, Ms Hassan said Tanzania stands a higher chance to rise only
if the entire country’s population had equal opportunities and were
provided with the chance to develop their talents and put them towards
creating prosperity for the country.
“Equality for women is progress for all.
We need to think differently and invest in women leadership as the way
to change Tanzania’s political and economic landscape to deliver on the
country’s Inclusive Growth Agenda,’’ she added.
She commended the establishment of the
programme in the country which she said would help to promote business
competitiveness for equal distribution of resources.
“Fortunately, the programme that we are
launching today comes at the very right and yet challenging moment where
the debate about the role of women in business life is rapidly
transforming itself” she insisted.
Speaking at the same occasion, the
Minister of State in the Prime Minister’s Office (Parliament, Labour,
Youth, Employment and People With Disabilities), Jenister Mhagama, said
the programme would help in promoting talents to the men and women of
Tanzania and attain vision 2025 which aims at ensuring the country is
becoming a middle income economy by 2025.
“Currently, Tanzanian unemployment rate
stands at 10.3 percent; therefore, job creation should be a development
agenda that the government should focus on,’’ she noted.
ATE Executive Director, Aggrey Mlimuka,
said the major aims of the programme is to get more women into
management positions, decision making processes and on Corporate Boards
and that it will be delivered through executive training on Leadership,
Rhetoric and Board Competence where as the courses will be directly
linked to participants’ daily work routine at their workplaces.
Minister Counselor, at the Norwegian
embassy, Mr Jealous Chirove, said the private sector had a role to play
and that Norway was encouraging more women to be given positions in
leadership and in the corporate world because experience indicated that
they have ability to deliver.
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