Thursday 21 August 2014

Malawi's Joyce Banda and the Rise of Women in African Politics

Malawi’s new president Joyce Banda is another proof of the strength of women in African politics. She has overcome tribulations to shoot to the top of her country’s leadership ladder.

Motherly and resplendent in rich African colours, Joyce Hilda Banda came across as the perfect embodiment of African feminine grace when the international media focused on her swearing-in as Malawi’s fourth president on Saturday April 7, 2012, in Lilongwe, the country’s capital city.

Taking office as president following the sudden death of maverick President Bingu wa Mutharika on Thursday April 5, Ms Banda has made history as Malawi’s first female head of state. After having been her country’s first female vice-president, she has now also added more feathers to her hat by becoming the second female president in Africa in modern times, after Liberia’s Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.

Although somewhat self-effacing, Banda had already made enough impact during her political and civic career to have been listed in Forbes Magazine in 2011 as the third most powerful woman in Africa, behind President Sirleaf and Ms Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Nigeria’s Finance Minister.

Given Banda and Sirleaf’s shared status as Africa’s only two female presidents, it is not surprising that the latter was one of the first people to congratulate Banda and welcome her as the second woman leader in Africa. “This means I no longer will be lonely,” Sirleaf said during a recent interview. “The potential for more women leadership at the highest level is now being made even stronger.”

Soon after her swearing in, the Malawian and international media were profuse in hailing Ms Banda’s smooth inauguration as a triumph for democracy. Taking the lead, Malawi’s own Sunday Times stated in an editorial that the new president’s inauguration had “helped to entrench and cement a democratic culture in the country”.

The paper then described the event as ‘a breath of fresh air after the divisive and confrontational rhetoric that characterised presidential parlance over the last few years’, and hailed the orderly transition as welcome “on our African continent, where smooth transitions are rare”.

As for Ms Banda, she spoke in conciliatory tones during the inauguration ceremony, calling for unity and a rejection of revenge. That was despite the fact that her elevation had come only two days after the death of the increasingly controversial former president, Bingu wa Mutharika, who considered her a rival and had been openly and persistently adversarial towards her in both word and deed.

True to her reputation as a peacemaker, during her swearing in ceremony Ms Banda fervently appealed for national unity. “I want all of us to move into the future with hope and with the spirit of oneness and unity,” she told her compatriots. “I hope we shall stand united, and I hope that as a God-fearing nation we [shall] allow God to come before us, because if we don’t do that then we [shall] have failed.”

Ms Banda’s placid demeanour aside, her combative personal and political history indicates that the lady president’s serene motherly looks can be deceptive. Having just celebrated her 62nd birthday, which fell on Thursday April 12, she has a well-earned reputation as a hard nut to crack when it comes to politics.


It was indeed not surprising that, having been the late Mutharika’s running mate when she stood as the vice-presidential candidate of the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) in the May 2009 presidential election, Banda easily won. It was her performance at the polls that saw her serving as Malawi’s first female vice-president, a position she occupied between May 29, 2009, and the day she was sworn in as the Malawi’s acting head of state.

Before serving as the vice-president, Ms Banda had been her country’s Minister for Foreign Affairs, occupying the important docket from June 1, 2006 to May 29, 2009. Earlier, she was a Member of Parliament for the Zomba-Malosa constituency, and soon became Minister of Gender, Child Welfare and Community Services, before being appointed to the foreign affairs ministry by President Bingu wa Mutharika on June 1, 2006.

Community organiser

Prior to her active career in politics, Ms Banda dedicated a lot of her time to working with the community, taking particular interest in the well-being of women and children in Malawi. It was during that period that she founded the Joyce Banda Foundation, the National Association of Business Women (NABW), the Young Women Leaders Network and the internationally lauded Hunger Project.

 While Banda’s history-making ascent to the vice-presidency was hailed by many Malawians, before long her victory was to prove pyrrhic. As fate would have it, just a year after their election victory President Mutharika and his vice-president and erstwhile running mate had a spectacular political fall-out. The fierce political battle that ensued and persisted until Mutharika’s death was fuelled by vicious succession manoeuvres.

The unexpected moves to definitively ostracise Banda were articulated by President Mutharika and his cohorts in the ruling DPP, with the all-out bid to sideline Banda aimed at finally creating a family dynasty in Malawi. As things turned out, Mutharika’s intentions in elbowing Banda aside were to groom his younger brother Peter, then serving in his cabinet as the foreign minister – the position earlier held by current president Banda - to become the DPP candidate for the next polls slated to take place in 2014.

To get Banda safely out of the way well before the end of Mutharika’s second and constitutionally final term, the late president and his co-conspirators first expelled the hapless VP from the ruling Democratic Progressive Party. The ouster came in a surprise move by the DPP on 12 December 2010, and also saw the expulsion of the party’s second vice president Khumbo Kachali, a Banda ally. Accused of undefined ‘anti-party’ activities, the two were consequently left party-less and for a while remained in the political cold, even as the intrigues against the prospective future president were intensified.

Banda’s enemies were not yet through with her. Soon there were increased calls, spearheaded by DPP’s spokesman Hetherwick Ntaba, for Banda to also resign as Malawi’s Vice-President, thereby leaving the coast clear for the elevation of Mutharika’s anointed kin. Ever the fighter, the battle-hardened Banda did not find that proposition palatable in the least, despite feeling the intense political heat directed at her.

ticking to her guns and emboldened by rising popular support, the courageous lady adamantly refused to give up her job, and instead went to court. In doing so she and her wide base of supporters cited the provisions of the constitution, which recognised her as the de jure holder of the position, a stand supported by a ruling made in her favour.

That done and over with, and as if to give her detractors a dose of their own medicine, Ms Banda proceeded to form her own People’s Party, and soon emerged as one of Mutharika’s fiercest critics. Implacable to the end, she persistently lambasted the president’s management of the Malawian economy, the country at the time being beset by worsening fuel shortages, rising prices and high unemployment.

It was those daunting problems that resulted in the widespread anti-government protests, marked by rising demands for President Mutharika’s resignation, whose handling by the police provoked Banda’s reaction. As for the sitting president’s dreams of a family dynasty in Malawi, an unequivocal Banda summarily dismissed them, while unleashing a flurry of ripostes that have remained memorable to this day.

“The chronic disease of third term[s], or chieftaincy, remains one of the greatest enemies of our efforts to achieve sustainable development,” she is reported to have said before caustically adding in a backhander aimed at Mutharika: “The country is constantly caught [up] in a vicious circle of privatisation of the state where one or two people hold the fate of the country.”

Undeterred by the forces pitted against her, Ms Banda became increasingly vocal as her country rapidly descended to the doldrums. After the anti-government protests broke out in July 2011, for instance, police used live ammunition to quell them, and 19 people were shot dead in the northern cities of Karonga and Mzuzu. In the aftermath of the unrest, Malawi’s health ministry confirmed the deaths, and a livid Banda was quick to express her disgust. Pointing out that Malawi could face more unrest ahead of the planned 2014 polls, she was quick to sound the alarm.

“The road to 2014 will be rough, bumpy and tough,” she warned her compatriots. “Some will even sacrifice their own lives.”

Despite her rising tribulations at the hands of the political movers and shakers of the day, Ms Banda is reported to have remained widely popular in Malawi. That notwithstanding, her odyssey during the Mutharika government’s machinations against her ensured that up to the time of her predecessor’s death she remained fired from the ruling DPP. Constantly vilified, for close to two years she did not attend Cabinet meetings.

Humble upbringing
With her origins in Malemia, a village in southern Malawi, Banda was born on April 12, 1950 in Malawi’s colonial capital of Zomba, where her father was an accomplished and popular police brass band musician. She began her career as a secretary, and when still in her youth became a well-known figure during the dictatorial era of Kamuzu Banda - no relation to her own family.

Married and having three children by the age of 25, Ms Banda in her younger years fled to Nairobi to escape what she perceived as gender-based discrimination in her home country. She consequently became a fierce critic of the practice, and after abandoning an abusive marriage later returned to Malawi and settled down with her current husband Richard Banda, the country’s former Chief Justice.

Ms Banda ventured into formal politics in 1999, when nearly 50, during Malawi’s second democratic elections. Having won a parliamentary seat through the former ruling party of retired president Bakili Muluzi, Banda’s rise to the presidency has been speedy by all indications. Coming from humble beginnings, after some years working as a secretary, she had branched out into business.

Quickly making a mark as an entrepreneur, between 1985 and 1997 Banda managed and established various businesses and organizations, including Ndekani Garments (1985), Akajuwe Enterprises (1992) and Kalingidza Bakery (1995). In the meantime she was dedicated to community work and philanthropy, and was known as an avid community educator and grassroots gender rights activist.

Totally dedicated to her new calling, her success in business moved her to assist other women to achieve financial independence and break the cycles of abuse and poverty that characterized their lives. Providence seems to have steadily steered Ms Banda to her destiny as the leader of her people, and she did not allow her lowly educational background to hold her back.

Not endowed with impressive academic credentials, she initially only had a Cambridge School Certificate, although she pursued higher education later in life, eventually obtaining a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Early Childhood Education and a Diploma in Management. Having courageously fought toe-to-toe with her detractors while also pursuing further education and helping her people, today she has many national and international honours under her belt.

Although according to the Malawian constitution Lady President Joyce Hilda Banda is serving in an acting capacity pending elections, she has hit the ground running, and is already making her authority felt in the landlocked central African country.

Beset by the many political, social and economic problems inherited from her predecessor, Ms Banda has been quick to lay the foundation for turning her troubled country around.

Having made it clear that she will not be vindictive or pursue revenge against those who blocked her route to the presidency, the new Malawian head of state has nonetheless pointed out the need to do some urgent housecleaning work. That task has inevitably involved getting rid of some of her former opponents inside Malawi’s political establishment, many of whom have been fervently seeking accommodation in Banda’s government..

With many of them identified as die-hard Mutharika loyalists, the die seems cast, however, and among the first ones to be sacked was one Patricia Kaliati. The ill-fated lady was the former Information Minister who publicly insisted that the late president Bingu wa Mutharika was alive more than one day after his death on Thursday, April 5, 2012.

Her being shown the door marked the rapid shake-up of the public service in Malawi that Ms Banda unveiled in her bid to purge the government of Mutharika loyalists. Particularly focusing on suspect characters formerly controlling government finances and media, the rapid purge also saw the sacking of a Mr. Bright Malopa, a Mutharika ally who formerly headed the Malawi Broadcasting Corporation and was notorious for his determination to use state media to relentlessly campaign against Banda after her expulsion from the DPP.

Also sacked by Banda have been Mr. Perks Ligoya, the former governor of the Malawi Reserve Bank, and former police chief Peter Mukhito, both close allies of the late President Mutharika. While the former was earlier blamed for pursuing an allegedly rigid exchange rate policy that the International Monetary Fund has blamed for much of Malawi’s economic woes, the former police chief was implicated in acts of violence against Malawians, among them the alleged slaying of student activist Robert Chasowa.

While announcing some of the recent sackings, Ms Banda explained that urgent action needed to be taken to correct the mistakes of the past, while at the same time seeking justice for the victims of Mutharika’s intolerant regime.

“Although we are in mourning, certain decisions cannot wait,” President Banda reportedly told a news conference in the capital Lilongwe three days after taking office.

Displaying the warm motherly instinct for which she is known, she also launched an investigation into the mysterious murder of student activist Chasowa.

“As a mother, I feel for my fellow mother who doesn’t know what killed her son,” she said. “I understand how painful it is, and I will make sure we find out who killed our son Chasowa. We don’t want people to go about murdering people fearlessly.”

As for the gainers in Ms Banda’s reorganisation of the public service, they included Ms Mary Nkosi, who replaced Ligoya as Reserve Bank Governor, making her the first woman to hold the job after having served as a deputy governor for a long time.

Other gainers were Mr. Radson Mwadiwa, a career bureaucrat who was named the new secretary to the Treasury and chairman of the state-owned Malawi Savings Bank. Mr. Moses Kakuyu, a conscientious parliamentarian who pressed for reforms after breaking away from Mutharika’s Democratic Progressive Party, became the new information minister, while the new director general of the Malawi Broadcasting Corporation is Mr Benson Tembo, a veteran broadcaster and former diplomat whose last posting was as ambassador to Zimbabwe.

Amidst the numerous changes, observers of the Malawian political scene were quick to caution against over-optimism, with the Sunday Times reminding the populace that in the past they had faced previous ‘false dawns’. Referring to Mutharika’s record in office, the paper pointed out that the former president had been widely hailed for his sterling performance during his first term, but had slipped into retrogression during recent years as he cracked down on basic freedoms and sent the Malawian economy into a tail-spin.

“The country’s previous leaders all started with a lot of promise,” the paper said, “but the trappings of power corrupted them to such an extent that they forgot the source of their power and became gods who brooked no advice, let alone criticism, regardless of whether it is constructive or not.”

Such caution aside, President Joyce Hilda Banda for now seems set to herald a new dawn for her country, and she evidently has the credentials, will and ability to do so.

Will Joyce Banda continue her commitment to women now she is President of Malawi?

Last week I had the pleasure of listening to President Joyce Banda of Malawi speak at Chatham House. She is still within her first 100 days in office after the sudden death of the previous President but all the signs point to a President who genuinely cares about the country and its people and has the lives of the Malawian women and children very close to her heart.

She spoke articulately, intelligently and with a touch of humour. She appears to be an inclusive President and certainly she has the feelgood factor. She silenced her critics at the meeting (there were only a couple) by ‘understanding’ their position but explaining very clearly and firmly why she has made certain decisions, she deferred to her Foreign Minister on some issues but also answered the same questions articulately.
The economic ‘bitter pill’

Her policies are yet to be played out and I am not entirely convinced about her strategies for wealth creation and economic recovery. Her idea to promote wealth creation through the private sector needs fleshing out and I am a bit concerned about her plans to develop Malawi’s mining industry. She wants to encourage fair trade but she doesn’t appear to have developed ideas for increasing or improving quality of production.


She is swallowing the ‘bitter pill’ handed to her by the International Monetary Fund and has already devalued the currency but she articulated why and her actions so far have attracted international confidence and support. She is already putting in place safety nets for the poorest and her government is negotiating transparently and it seems quite fairly with the unions around salary increases to cope with the sharp increase in the price of goods.
A role model for women in Malawi

A young Malawian women in the audience got up to say how excited she is that Malawi has a woman President and that  Joyce Banda is a role model for all  women in Malawi but she asked, will Joyce continue her commitment to women and girls now she is President? Coming from a women’s rights activist background this was obviously a topic Joyce felt very comfortable with and she talked about her days as a women’s rights activist.

She also mentioned a few initiatives. She has established the Joyce Banda Foundation and has initiated a project to improve conditions for market women such as improving sanitation facilities, establishing crèches and helping the women establish a revolving savings and loan scheme.
Maternal health and safe motherhood

She has also re-established a second Presidential initiative for  maternal health and safe motherhood. What is refreshing about this new initiative is that not only is she focusing on improving the delivery of health outcomes for women but she is also addressing the root causes of poor maternal health. She wants to reduce child marriage and discourage women from giving birth at home, which she says are the key contributors to maternal mortality and fistula  (of which Malawi has one of the highest rates in the world). She wants to launch a nationwide campaign to educate traditional leaders about the dangers of child marriage and early pregnancy and become advocates encouraging parents to keep their girls at school and women to give birth in clinics.
On the international stage

She has Malawi at heart but is quite pan-African in her thinking. She identifies herself as both a Malawian and an African and early on in her speech referred more broadly to Africa in the globalised world than to Malawi.



President Joyce Banda: New Focus on Women’s Health and Empowerment in Malawi

The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) recently created a video featuring Malawi’s first female president, Joyce Banda, talking about the importance of women’s health and empowerment.

When Joyce Banda unexpectedly ascended to the presidency of Malawi last April, after the death of President Mutharika, many in her country and around the world wondered what her impact would be as Malawi’s first female president.  Among the many challenges, her government faces high rates of maternal mortality, high total fertility rates, and high HIV prevalence among women and girls, combined with low levels of women’s economic empowerment and widespread violence against women.

CSIS wanted to learn more about how women leaders in Africa are bringing new attention to women’s health and empowerment in their own countries, and to bring those voices into the discussion about U.S. policy priorities for women’s global health. To do this, we sent a small team to Malawi and Zambia in December 2012.

During an interview with President Banda in Malawi, she underscored the exciting prospects raised by her tenure as well as the daunting challenges ahead:

“You know when a woman gets into State House, they notice the little things that would otherwise be ignored by a man,” with particular emphasis on family planning, maternal mortality, and malnutrition. President Banda was especially passionate that the economic empowerment of women is an essential step to ensure that there is effective family planning:  “it is only when a woman is economically empowered that she can negotiate at household level with her husband about the number of children that body of hers can have.”


President Banda went on to describe her own compelling personal story of the vital link between education for girls and economic empowerment for women, against a backdrop of violence against women.

“I had three children, in an abusive marriage. And then finally I said, no. I have to walk out. For the sake of my children... So for me when I talk about the importance of economic empowerment of women, it's because I tried it.”

In Malawi, we saw a woman wearing a T-shirt celebrating the first 100 days of Joyce Banda’s presidency.  Banda’s supporters expressed hope about the positive changes underway, from public works projects to the re-engagement of key international donors, to a new initiative on maternal mortality. But even her most ardent supporters acknowledge that real change will take time. Their optimism is being sorely tested by Malawi’s tough economic and social and realities, including a legacy of corruption, autocracy, and mismanagement.

Yet President Banda made clear to us that she will “stay the course.”

As she explained: “while I'm trying to bring the country back on track, I'm also very mindful of my mission - to make sure that I continue to empower women… So for me, that is what being a leader is all about.”

‘Mandela’s character shaped me’: Malawian President Joyce Banda speaks at Mandela’s state funeral

Malawian president Joyce Banda was amazed by former president Nelson Mandela’s humility and leadership, she said on Sunday.

“The first time I was privileged to meet president Mandela was during his visit to Malawi… shortly after he was released from prison,” she told mourners at his state funeral in Qunu, in the Eastern Cape.

“I was amazed by his humility and his great sense of leadership… Mandela’s character has shaped my life.”

Banda said that after visiting Robben Island in 1996, she had tried to find every book she could about Mandela.


“I was further touched by his life and the story of Tata Mandela. I read and read everything.”

Banda, who is also Southern African Development Community chairwoman, said she was honoured to be able to pay tribute to Mandela.

“I join you, people of this rainbow nation, to celebrate a life of one of Africa’s greatest leaders.

“I stand before you to join you, the people of South Africa and the world to mourn the loss a great leader,” she said.

Mandela’s widow, Graca Machel stared straight ahead of her when Banda recounted a time when she visited her and Mandela at their home in Houghton, Johannesburg.

Equal representation for women in SA politics is still far away

It may have been just a four percentage point drop in women’s representation in parliament in the May 2014 South African elections; but that drop sent tremors across a region hoping to at least show some progress on this front by 2015, the deadline year for the SADC Protocol on Gender and Development, signed here in 2008.

On 9 August— Women’s Day in South Africa - it’s a sobering thought that we not only let ourselves down by failing to reach gender parity in one key area of decision-making: we took all of SADC down with us.

South Africa is the most populous nation in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) and a torch bearer for gender equality.

Half the region’s MPs reside in this country. Achieving 44% women in parliament in the 2009 elections shot South Africa to the top of the chart in SADC and to the global top ten.

The drop to 40% in May 2014 dealt a crippling blow to the 50/50 campaign. 

With less than one year to go until 2015, no country in the 15-nation region has reached the 50% target of women’s representation in parliament, cabinet or local government.

Over the six years, women’s overall representation in parliament hit its highest at 26% in 2014, increasing by two percentage points from 24% in 2013.

However, best predictions in the 2014 Southern African Gender Protocol Barometer  are that even with five more elections by the end of 2015, this figure will at most rise to 29%, meaning SADC will not have achieved the original 30% let alone 50% target by 2015.


Women’s representation in local government slid from 26% to 24% in the last year, and may just claw back to 28% by the end of 2015, but will also fall shy of both the 30% and 50% targets.

During the 2014 SADC Protocol@Work summits, the Southern African Gender Protocol Alliance held working meetings on the 50/50 campaign and came up with country-specific strategies.

The strong message that emerged from these consultations is that without specific measures – quotas and electoral systems – to increase women’s political representation, change will remain painfully slow.

The 2014 Barometer reflects the global reality that women’s political representation is highest in Proportional Representation (PR) electoral systems (38% in parliament and 37% in local government) and in countries with quotas (38% in parliament and 37% in local government).

Countries with First Past the Post Systems (17% women in national and 14% women in local) have the lowest level of women’s representation, as do countries with no quota (17% national and 8% local).

However, SADC countries with the FPTP system have shown innovation over the last few years by following the Tanzania example of adopting to a mixed system, with women able to run for the openly contested seats, and be awarded an additional 30% of seats on a PR basis in accordance with the strength of each party.

The Zimbabwe elections in July 2013 provided a stark example of the possibilities and pitfalls of gender and election strategies. Zimbabwe witnessed an increase of 22 percentage points in women’s representation in parliament from 16% to 38% thanks to the constitutional quota that created a mixed system and guaranteed women a minimum of 22% of the seats in the National Assembly.

However, in the absence of similar provisions for local government the proportion of women in this sphere of governance declined from 18% to 16% in the same election.

In South Africa, the ruling African National Congress (ANC) became the first political party in SADC to adopt a voluntary 50% quota (the South West Africa Peoples Organisation in Namibia has since followed suit).

The danger of voluntary quotas, long raised by activists, is that they are linked to the electoral fortunes of political parties. This proved to be the case in the South African elections.

The decline in women’s political participation in the May elections is directly attributable to the decline in the ANC’s proportion of the vote, from 66% in the last election to 62% in the 2014 elections.

Malawi had a spirited 50/50 campaign but no constitutional or legislated quotas in FPTP system. The elections took place at a turbulent time, marred by charges of foul play. As often happens in such circumstances – and despite an incumbent woman president contesting the elections- the proportion of women dropped significantly from 17% from 22%.

For a moment too brief, the SADC regions marvelled and celebrated the first female President, Joyce Banda, former President of Malawi. She lost to Peter Mutharika (brother to the late former leader Bingu Mutharika) during the May 2014 elections.


With 44% women in parliament, Seychelles has come closest to achieving the parity target in this area of political decision-making, while Botswana and DRC (10%) are the lowest.

Seychelles is unique in that it is the only country in the SADC region to have achieved a high level of women in parliament without a quota, and in FPTP system. The island, which has a long tradition of men leaving in search of work, has a strong matriarchal culture.

Between August 2014 and the end of 2015, five more SADC countries – Botswana (local and national); Mozambique (national), Namibia (national), Mauritius (national) and Tanzania (national and local) are due to hold elections. Madagascar’s long overdue local elections may also take place during this period.

With primaries already past in Botswana, there is a danger of further backslide in the October 2014 elections. Mozambique (39%) and Tanzania (36%) already have a high representation of women in parliament. Mozambique has a PR system and the ruling Front for the Liberation of Mozambique (Frelimo) has a voluntary quota.

Tanzania has a Constitutional quota, and this is being raised from 30% to 50%. Gains are likely in both countries.

There are moves afoot in Namibia to legislate escalate the legislated quota at local level to national level, but it is not clear if this will happen in time for the October 2014 elections. Mauritius is debating a White Paper on Electoral reform that is likely to result in the quota at local level being escalated to national level but not in time for the 2015 national elections. It is therefore likely that only modest gains will be registered in both countries.

Detailed projections in the Barometer lead to the unavoidable conclusion that by the end of 2015, the region will not make even the 30% mark. This should however give impetus to a much more strategic approach to the 50/50 campaign, with emphasis on electoral systems and quotas, accompanied by strong advocacy campaigns, rather than simply training women for political office.

Colleen Lowe Morna is Chief Executive Officer of Gender Links and editor-in-chief of the Southern African Gender Barometer. She formerly served as Chief Programme Officer of the Commonwealth Observer Mission to South Africa in the run up to the 1994 elections. This article is part of the Gender Links News Service special series on Women’s Month.

Malawi ex-president Joyce Banda to attend Women Summit in USA

Malawi Former President Joyce Banda, is expected to attend Fortune Most Powerful Women’s Summit to be held in the United States of America in October 2014, sources said Saturday.Banda’s press officer Tusekele Mwanyongo said the summit under the theme New Connected Leadership, will among others, promote business ventures, education, arts and leadership through one-onĂ¢€“one interview, panel discussions, interactive breakout sessions and high level networking.

“The former president will pay for her transport because all top women across the world have been invited to the summit will have to cater for the transport and expenses on their own,” he said.


The summit has attracted Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Nollywood Actress Omotola Jelade Ekeinde who also made it in the 2013 Forbes Magazine top 100 influential women in the world.

Other high ranking women heading for the summit include Clinton Foundation Vice chairperson Chelsea Clinton, IMF managing director Christine Lagarde, Facebook CEO Sheryl Sandberg, Yahoo CEO, Marissa Mayer and Xerox CEO Ursula Burns.

Saturday 16 August 2014

Malawi's Most Romantic Couple - President Joyce Banda and Richard Banda of Malawi

President Joyce Banda and Richard Banda of Malawi

In this most unusual of unions the roles are reversed. The woman proudly wears the title of President of the nation Malawi’s first and the continent’s second female leader; she headed National Association for Business Women, an outfit dedicated to provide funding for female entrepreneurs.



She has her man, the first black chief justice of Malawi a man of the law, Richard Banda was also a public prosecutor and captain of Malawi’s national soccer team.
 
 
Blogger Templates