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PS calls on women in leadership to stand up for the rights of the girl child

Women in leadership positions have been called upon to use their status in society to advocate for the rights of their fellow women especially the underprivileged ones.

Principal Secretary (PS), State Department for Parliamentary Affairs, Ms. Aurelia Rono, asserted that it requires courage since it is not easy for a woman to come out and speak out about their tribulations and advocate for the rights of her fellow women because the space in Africa is still highly patriarchal.

Speaking during the “She Leads Africa Summit 2025,” Ms. Rono said that the event provides a platform to discuss where women have come from and what lessons they can learn from that journey.

“It has not been easy for us, and I want to congratulate all of you because I know you lead, and you represent an institution that is advocating for a girl child, for a woman in Africa. I congratulate you for doing that,” said the PS.

She said that this is a very important discussion as it highlights the experiences she went through as a lady.

“I know if everyone of us is given an opportunity, there is that point in time where things were not favouring you. Some people were trying to stop you just because you are a girl or a woman,” said the PS.

According to Ms. Rono, advocating for women’s rights requires courage since she herself has gone through difficult moments and experiences adding that when she goes to schools to speak to girls, she reminds them that it is possible because she has made it as a lady not because it was easy but because of the focus and the voices of women who came earlier.

“Going forward, your voices will be the ones to be mentioned in your respective countries. It depends on how you speak now,” she said.

The PS challenged women to walk the talk, saying, “It is what you speak and what you do that matters. Sometimes we speak, but it is not exactly what we do. So as women, we need to encourage ourselves that even as we lead the rest to advocate for women rights, let us lead in speaking and also in action.”

Linnet Awor, Technical Expert, Lobby and Advocacy at Terre des Hommes Netherlands, explained the need to ensure that girls and young women continue to lead with impact in all spheres of life, now and in the future.

She said that this can be achieved through collaborative advocacy and the “She Leads Africa Summit 2025” will strengthen feminist and youth-led movements, encouraging regional commitments to ensure that Girls and Young Women are engaged meaningfully in governance and development.

“By the end of the Summit, participants will have secured tangible policy commitments from regional and continental institutions to embed Girls’ and Young Women’s leadership across key decision-making spaces. The Summit will also strengthen intergenerational and cross-border feminist networks and produce a clear Pan-African roadmap for a just, inclusive, and gender-equal post-2030 agenda,” said Awor.

Terres des hommes Netherlands, Country Director-Kenya Magdalane Muoki said that the She Leads is a global programme being implemented in a number of countries within Africa, Kenya being one of them.

Muoki highlighted that the programme is aimed at amplifying the voices of girls and young women helping them to take part in all decision-making processes at all levels be it community, national, or even international.

“My message to girls and young women is that they have all it takes to take up the space, be where decisions are being made and take lead in advocating for their rights. I also call upon the leaders, the activists, the policymakers to help us sustain the great strides we have made in this programme,” she said.

Africa, with its vibrant youth, including over 116 million under 35 in East Africa alone, is a continent of immense potential. Yet, the leadership of young people, especially Girls and Young Women (GYW), remains undervalued. Girls and young women are actively addressing global issues such as climate change, digital inequality, gender-based violence, and economic injustice but are often excluded from decision-making. Now is the time to change this.

As Africa nears the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) deadline, the need to protect progress and ensure girls and young women are sufficiently integrated in decision-making processes has never been more urgent.

This historic event, organized by the Horn of Africa Youth Network (HoAYN) and Terre des Hommes Netherlands, in collaboration with Pan African She Leads Consortium partners, Plan International AULO, Defence for Children – ECPAT Netherlands (DCI-ECPAT), FEMNET, and GIMAC, marks the first-ever regional civil society-led summit convened for and by GYW across the continent.

Hosted in the Eastern Africa region, the Summit is both a powerful culmination of the five-year She Leads programme (2021–2025) and a bold step forward in shaping policies that place girls and young women at the centre of decision-making.

 By Joseph Ng’ang’a

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