Thursday, April 20, 2023

Tanzanian named in top 100 biodiversity crusaders

 

Ms Elizabeth Maruma Mrema. PHOTO | COURTESY

By Zephania Ubwani


Summary

·         Award-winning Elizabeth Maruma Mrema has been recognised for her dedication to conservation awareness

Arusha. A Tanzanian biodiversity crusader has been named among the top 100 influential people in the

world for 2023.

Award-winning Elizabeth Maruma Mrema has been recognised for her dedication to conservation awareness.

She is among the only two African women on TIME magazine’s list of the top 100 most influential people globally this year (2023).

The recognition comes only two months after Ms Mrema assumed her responsibilities as the deputy executive director of the UN Environment Programme.

She was appointed for the post by the UN secretary general in December last year and assumed responsibilities on February 15th.

The TIME Magazine’s 100 Most Influential People list features a blend of celebrated leaders, activists, artists, scientists and moguls.

Entrants, according to the highly rated American magazine, are recognised for changing the world regardless of the consequences of their actions.

Before taking over as UNEP’s deputy executive director, Ms Mrema served as executive secretary of the Secretariat for the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD).

This is a United Nations programme initiated in the early 1990s that is geared to conserve the world’s threatened or endangered genetic resources.

Prior to that, she served in various capacities at UNEP, a UN agency based in Nairobi, largely in the law and ecosystem protection dockets.

Ms Mrema, an accomplished lawyer trained at the University of Dar es Salaam, has instead defined her long service in the UN in conservation.

At one time, she was the executive secretary of the Secretariat for the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals.

At different times in the past, she worked at the Foreign Affairs ministry as senior legal counsel and taught at the Centre for Foreign Relations.

The TIME magazine list of the 100 most influential people adds to nearly a dozen awards the soft-spoken Tanzanian lady had landed in, mostly in the field of natural resources.

The only other woman on the list for this year’s award is from Kenya; she is the daughter of Ms Wangari Maathai, the first African woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize in 2004.

Ms Wanjari Maathai, an environmentalist, is the current managing director of the World Resources Institute, a think tank based in Washington.

Ms Mrema is the fourth Tanzanian national to serve in executive positions in the United Nations system.

Incidentally, she took over the same position (deputy executive secretary at UNEP) from Ms Joyce Msuya, who served in that capacity from 2018 to 2022.

High-profile Tanzanian nationals who were in the UN service were Dr Asha Rose Migiro, who was the deputy secretary general and Prof Anna Tibaijuka, the executive director of UN Habitat.

 

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