March
5, 2012, Nigeria’s award winning producer and broadcast journalist
Funmi Iyanda will join climbers from more than 32 African countries in a
historic advocacy climb up Mount Kilimanjaro. Africa UNiTE campaign is
organizing this climb as part of its campaign to End Violence Against
Women and Girls. Climbers are expected to arrive at Africa’s highest
summit on International Women’s Day –March 8, 2012, when all African
national flags will be displayed and the Africa commitments will be read
out.
Funmi
Iyanda joins South African rock band the Parlotones, South African
actress Rosie Motene, human rights lawyer, Ann Njogu, Congolese singer
Barbara Kanam, and many African women and men who play an active role in
their countries. For three days, they will hike up the Kilimanjaro in freezing temperatures, sleeping outdoors in sleeping bags without taking showers, and hike back down on the fourth day.
Through this climb, Africa Unite plans to raise global awareness on
ending violence against Women and Girls in Africa as well as secure concrete national commitments from African governments to be implemented by 2015 to end violence against women and girls.
An
outspoken advocate for women and children, Funmi has championed the
cause of vulnerable members of the Nigerian society, working with
organizations and concerned individuals to facilitate timely
interventions for indigent families through the
“Change-A-Life” project. Climbing Mount Kilimanjaro in solidarity with
the rest of Africa is an expression of her enduring commitment to
continue raising awareness on violence against women and girls.
Funmi
Iyanda has won tremendous recognition for her work in the media and for
her philanthropic and humanitarian interventions. She is an African
Leadership Institute Tutu Fellow and an Aspen Institute African Leadership Initiative fellow.
She has been honoured as a Young Global Leader (YGL) 2011 by the World
Economic Forum and was recently named one of Forbes 20 Youngest Power
Women in Africa.
Africa
UNiTE on Kilimanjaro is championed by Tim Challen, a victim of
gun-crime in Nairobi who now climbs Kilimanjaro to raise awareness on
issues that affect youth in Kenyan and Tanzanian slums. Africa
UNiTE is the regional component of the United Nations Secretary
General’s Global Campaign and a continent-wide partnership to end all
violence against women and girls. Africa UNiTE speaks out in order to
prevent violence against women, provide services to survivors and
promote justice and end impunity.
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