-Addresses Inaugural African Women summit in Nigeria
Abuja, Nigeria- Liberia’s Vice President Chief/ Dr. Jewel Howard-Taylor has spoken of the need for Africans to use innovative technology to solve Africa’s development challenges.
VP Howard-Taylor however stressed that the people of Africa (both urban and rural) need “Knowledge and information on the use of today’s innovation to be on speed pace of our one world.
According to a dispatch from Nigeria, she made the statement at the weekend when she served as keynote speaker at this year’s Inaugural African Women Summit for Peace and Development in Abuja, Nigeria.
Liberia’s first democratically elected female Vice President declared that innovation is only driven by knowledge.
Addressing hundreds of women delegates at the conference, VP Howard-Taylor cited Education as one of the areas through which Africans can create innovative learning platforms for the children, youth and people of all ages to understand, learn and enjoy themselves.
VP-Howard-Taylor is quoted as saying that not only the access technology brings but the fruits of the usage of technology which make life easier to manage.
‘‘A child in OYO can interact with one in Osaka and work out common solutions to global problems. A teacher is Sydney can use his virtual classroom to teach students in Timbuktu the value of cultural heritage sites. A buyer in HONG KONG can help a farmer in KUMASI to solve a bug infestation problem which if not resolved will lower his profits. And where a manufacturer in Liberia can show his products on line and get buyers to purchase them at the right price within seconds,’’ VP Howard-Taylor explained in her keynote address at the two-day summit.
Speaking on the Theme: ‘The role of the Women as a catalyst for sustainable development leveraging on innovative technology,’ the Liberian Vice president also indentified Health, Business, Agriculture and Governance as other crucial areas that can be explored through innovative technology to solve Africa’s development challenges.
VP Howard-Taylor and other distinguished speakers including the Director of Kenya Law school professor Plo Lumumba had brief interactions with the media on variety of issues, the dispatch from Abuja said.
The summit, organized by the Coalition of Wives of presidents and Vice presidents in Africa-COWAP, is a project which aims to harness the enormous capacity and goodwill of both sitting and past wives of Presidents and Vice Presidents in Africa, towards the sustainable development goals in four thematic areas including peace and Justice, girl child education, ending extreme hunger and poverty.
It seeks to engage past wives of Presidents and Vice Presidents in Africa as goodwill Ambassador for Africa’s Development.
The summit also creates a platform to engage with experts, academia policy makers, development practitioners and civil society on the role technology can play in driving development forward.
Its overall theme is: ‘Using Innovative Technology to solve Africa’s Development Challenges,’