After a one-year-long work of
platform construction and information upload, the new continental
women’s platform was launched on November 26, during the Global Gender
Summit in Kigali, Rwanda.
Implementing team members after the platform launch.
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The platform is intended to connect 50 million African women in business across 38 African countries.
The portal (www.womenconnect.org)
and mobile application (50MAWSP) come to solve the information issue
that African women in business face when it comes to accessing available
information on financial and non-financial services.
In a joint media address that
followed the launch of the platform, the Tripartite EAC-COMESA-ECOWAS
told journalists that sub-Saharan Africa hosts close to 13 million
formal and informal, small and medium-sized enterprises with one or more
women owners, but only 16-20 percent of the women entrepreneurs are
able to access long-term financing from formal financial institutions to
scale up their businesses.
The platform hosts information
on where to access capital, how to run a business, access training
resources, get mentorship, access markets and many more relevant
categories of information.
“This information is expected
to help women create business opportunities and thus empower them
economically”, press conference panel said.
This initiative is funded by
the African Development Bank (AfDB) and implemented by the Common Market
for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA), the East African Community
(EAC) and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS).
The audience appreciated the
initiative but expressed concerns about who was the target group of the
platform since it is technology-based and when many women in Africa
don’t have access to smartphones.
“I don’t think we need to have
everything in place to dream big in Africa,” Vanessa Moungar, Director
of Gender, Women and Civil Society Department in the African Development
Bank said. I know many projects that are running well in Africa from
which the World can learn from, she added.
Hon. Christophe Bazivamo, the
EAC Deputy Secretary General in charge of the Productive and Social
Sectors, disclosed that the implementing partners were executing many
other projects in parallel.
“This platform is one project
among many others. As we work towards women empowerment, we are also
working in energy, infrastructure, industry, health, and many other
sectors to ensure the effectiveness of our interventions,” said Hon.
Bazivamo.
The 50 Million African Women Speak platform is now up and running; it initially uses English, French and Arabic languages.
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