4 African finalists make the shortlist for Commonwealth Youth Awards 2020
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The 16 finalists in this year’s Commonwealth Youth Awards, including innovators, activists and entrepreneurs from 12 countries, have been announced. All will each receive a trophy, a certificate and £1,000 to expand the scope of their projects.
This year, the awards received more than 500 entries from 40 countries. Of those shortlisted, the top candidate from each region will be named as a regional winner. One of these four regional winners will become the Commonwealth Young Person of the Year 2020. The regional winners will each earn a trip to London to attend the awards ceremony on 11 March 2020 and will receive £3,000. The overall pan-Commonwealth winner will take home a total of £5,000.
The judging panel included high commissioners, development experts and youth leaders from across the Commonwealth. The awards recognise outstanding young people whose innovative projects have made a real impact in helping their countries achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG).
“Their talent paired with tangible solutions sends a strong signal that they should be equal partners in the development agenda, not passive allies,” said Commonwealth head of social policy development Layne Robinson.
Image source: thecommonwealth.org
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The 2020 finalists are:
Africa and Europe
Joshua Ebin (Nigeria)
Focus: SDG 12 – Responsible Consumption and Production
Ebin is the founder of ‘Jumela Limited’, an agro-technology venture which specialises in the production of plant-based compost and novel agro-products for crop production farmers in Nigeria. The venture aims to tackle poor food waste management, pollution problems and low agricultural yield in the country. The venture has so far produced two metric tonnes of compost for sale to national clients and created jobs for more than 25 workers.
Galabuzi Brian Kakembo (Uganda)
Focus: SDG 8 – Decent Work and Economic Growth
Kakembo is the founder of ‘WEYE Clean Energy’, a social enterprise that produces and sells eco-friendly briquettes (blocks of compressed charcoal) made from biodegradable plastics and organic waste to home, schools and local institutions. Profits are used to fund community outreach programmes and training for young people and women in smart agriculture. The enterprise’s work has reached more than 800 women and young people of which 600 are now earning income from briquette making or plastic waste recycling.
Salvatory Kessy (Tanzania)
Focus: SDG 4 – Quality Education
Kessy is the founder of ‘SmartClass’, an online platform which matches low-cost qualified and vetted tutors to students interested in learning basic skills such as numeracy, literacy, computing, agriculture and languages. The offline platform allows users to book face-to-face tuition through a text and the group tuition model allows learners to book tutors collectively and reduce costs. The platform has 5,000 active registered tutors and 20,000 learners in Tanzania.
Elizabeth Wanjiru Wathuti (Kenya)
Focus: SDG 13 – Climate Action
Wathuti is the founder of the ‘Green Generation Initiative’ which focuses on promoting environmental education and food security in schools, particularly by encouraging a tree growing culture and through its ‘adopt-a-tree’ campaign. The initiative has so far helped plant 30,000 tree seedlings in more than 40 schools. In addition, more than 20,000 school children have been trained to be environmentally conscious across seven Kenyan counties.