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Inaugural First Ladies of Africa Impact and Resilience (FLAIR) Gala Awards and Dinner

At the inaugural First Ladies of Africa Impact and Resilience (FLAIR) Gala Awards and Dinner, H.E. Dr. Joyce G. N. Kithure, a scientist at the University of Nairobi’s Department of Chemistry and a long-time champion of women’s inclusion in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics) , made her mission unmistakably clear. She has become, for many girls, both a mentor and a symbol of what is possible. “When a girl is given access to education, mentorship, resources, and opportunity, she does not just change her story; she changes the story of everyone around her. She becomes a catalyst for growth, innovation, and generational transformation,” she said, drawing applause from a room filled with leaders, academics, innovators, captains of industry and students.

The FLAIR event, which was hosted at the Fairmont Norfolk, aims to bring together Africa’s First Ladies with leaders from academia, industry, and civil society to accelerate solutions to issues such as economic inclusion, resilience, and gender equality. Calling it “a movement”, She praised the University of Nairobi for what she described as a bold step forward. “FLAIR is more than a program. It is a movement, a high-level, multi-sectoral platform designed to inspire, empower, and foster innovation among Africa’s First Ladies and visionary women.”

Her speech reflected a blend of the scientific discipline she teaches at the university and the public service role she carries as Second Lady. She spoke of resilience, of the unseen labour of women across the continent, and of the need for intentional investment in girls’ education. “Tonight’s gala theme ‘From Influence to Impact: Advancing Resilience and Economic Inclusion’, is not an abstract. It is a blueprint,” she said, urging African governments and institutions to move beyond symbolism to collaboration and measurable action.
For H.E. Dr. Joyce G. N. Kithure, supporting girls in STEM is not a side project, it is central to Africa’s future. She reminded the audience that empowering women is “not an event… it is a continuous commitment.” adding that “It is a movement that requires collaboration, policy advocacy, mentorship, and sustained investment. It calls on each of us to use our voices, our platforms, and our influence to create pathways for others.” As the evening closed, her message remained clear: Africa’s next generation of innovators is already here. What they need now is opportunity, and champions like her to light the way.
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