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Buumba with one of her many awards |
By Paul Shalala
Since the election of Members of
Parliament, Mayors, Council Chairpersons and Councillors two weeks ago, this
blogger is profiling a number of youths and females with unique attributes who
were elected to lead for the next five years.
A week ago, this blog profiled newly
elected Patriotic Front Kalulushi Member of Parliament Kampamba Mulenga who is
the only female among the 22 newly elected lawmakers on the Copperbelt.
Today, this blogger is profiling
newly elected Magoba Ward Councillor Buumba Malambo, an award
winning social worker and women’s rights activist.
25 year old Buumba was elected on the UPND ticket
and is the only female among the 16 Councillors in Kafue District.
Who is Buumba Malambo?
Buumba was born on June 10, 1991 and she grew up in the mining town of
Mufulira on the Copperbelt.
She went to various schools in the
town and later enrolled at the University of Zambia where she obtained a Bachelors
Degree in Social work in 2014.
She has also acquired other education
qualifications in the UK and the USA.
A staunch Seventh-Day Adventist who has
taken leadership positions in the Youth Department over the years, Buumba still considers
herself a committed Christian.
She is not yet married but ‘is in a
relationship.’
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Some pupils at Magoba School who received her donations |
Charity work
Buumba says she started charity work
at the tender age of 15 and she has not looked back at giving back to the
community.
“At the age of 15 i was already
involved in charity work with the Judith Chikonde Foundation and
participated in the maize distribution project where I was donating maize meal
to the people of Mupambe village during the typhoid outbreak in 2007. I was
even appointed Mufulira Youth Secretary by the then Mufulira Town Clerk from
2008 to 2010” said Buumba in an online interview.
When she was studying for her degree
in social work, Buumba chose to do her rural experience in Magoba ward of
Kafue, an area which any student would refuse to live in.
“I chose Magoba because I wanted to
meet real people. I wanted to learn their way of life,” said Buumba in one of
her Facebook statuses.
And this is how she developed
interest in Magoba to an extent were she would set up an organisation to help
the women and children and later stand for elections as a Councillor.
She says her work in the community
does not just involve local people only but government as well.
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Some women beneficiaries of Buumbalambo Foundation |
“Am the youngest serving member of
the Ministry of Gender and Child National Co-ordinating Committee. Over the
years, I have worked with the Ministry of Gender and Child Development to
organise events related to children such as the International Day of the Girl
Child, Day of the African Child, Children Rights Day and Child Labour Day.
My Charity Buumbalambo Foudation is
currently working on a project to stop early marriages in rural Zambia with the
help of the Ministry of Gender and Child Development and the Ministry of General Education.”
According to details on her Facebook
page, Buumbalambo Foundation is registered both in Zambia and Britain and has enrolled
435 children on its sponsorship programme since she launched the project in
March 2015.
Through her charity, she has collected
over 15,000 clothes, toys and shoes from the University of Zambia, colleges,
individuals and Radio Phoenix Helpline project which she put in her charity
shop and donated to the needy.
Some donations have also come from places like the United Kingdom, Australia and some South
American countries.
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Buumba meets Queen Elizabeth II in London |
Awards and Recognitions
In early 2016, Buumba was selected by
the US State Department to be among 42 young Zambian young leaders to take part in
the 2016 Mandela Washington Fellowship, a six weeks training in professional
courses at various American universities.
The fellowship is championed by
President Barack Obama under his Young African Leaders Initiative (YALI), which
brings 1,000 young African leaders annually to the US to study Business and
Entrepreneurship, Civic Engagement, Energy and Public Management.
However, a month before she was to
leave for the US, Buumba was informed that the opposition UPND had adopted her
as its candidate for the Magoba ward election in the August 11 general
elections.
She decided to choose politics and
withdrew from the fellowship.
Her selection in the fellowship was
on the basis of her community work and the recognition she has received over the years.
The Mandela Washington Fellowship is
not the only recognition she has received from a world leader.
In June 2015, she was invited to
Buckingham Palace in London by the British monarch Queen Elizabeth II as part
of her Young Leaders Advisory Panel.
The following are some of the local
and international awards she has won over the years: the first and youngest
Zambian to win the Women4Africa Award (2015), Africa Arising Award (2015),
Zambia Woman of the Year Award (2016), Mwape Peer Award (2015), the African
International Achievers Award (2014), Zambia Woman of the Year (2016) and Voice
of Youth Africa Award (2013).
She also adds: “Due to my
contribution to the Education sector in Zambia, I was selected to meet the President
of Malta during the Commonwealth Youth Council meeting to seal the gap and make
collaborations of youth activities between Zambia and Malta. I was also
selected to represent the youths during the visit of International Labour Organisation
Director General Guy Rider’s first ever visit t to Zambia"
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Buumba sensitising women about PMTCT |
Buumbalambo Foundation
Buumba is passionate about women,
their well being and children.
She runs Buumbalambo Foundation, an
organisation which champions the rights of women and empowers school going
children with clothes, schools books and beddings.
The charity has four projects
currently running:
- Mwana Apunzile
sponsorship programme where people choose a child and support their
education.
- Sewing a future project for young mothers where they sew
and make crafts that are sold locally and internationally to help raise
money for them to support their children’s education.
- Through the help
of traditional leaders, Buumbalambo Foundation was given land to build a community
school, a resource centre and develop a farm in Gelemiya Village where
children walk several kilometres to the nearest school.
- The farm project
which will assist in food production as some children in the areas she is
working in die of hunger.
- Pop A Future project where young people are empowered
with employment through skills, ICT and popcorn machines.
Buumba Foundation, with funding
from SAFAIDS is running a four months project called BREAK THE TABOO aimed at curbing the
rampant levels of deaths among children born with HIV.
The project is training mothers
in Prevention of Mother To Child Transmission (PMTCT) of HIV.
In June when the project was
launched, this is what Buumba said: “ A woman is the heart of a community. On
Saturday i launched my 4 months ''Break the taboo'' access to PMTCT services
project with a two days training attended by 150 women from 6 villages in my
ward Magoba sponsored by SAfAIDS”
She says when she realized that
many women in the area had less or no knowledge on PMTCT and sometimes shun
important health service because of local beliefs like taboos, she wrote a
project proposal to SAfAIDS who gave her a grant to run the project.
Buumba The Politician
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Buumba campaigning in July |
At 24, Buumba is a young
politician.
She entered politics at a tender
age and seems to be inspired by several local female politicians.
On her Facebook page, she has
photos with several former Ministers like Dora Siliya, Sylvia Masebo, Professor
Nkandu Luo and several others she has shared platforms with on issues of gender
and children.
Earlier this year, Buumba
travelled to Ghana to attend the African Young Women in Politics Conference which was held at the west African
country’s House of Parliament.
She
describes the deliberations at the event as successful and inspiration.
She
also talks of her delight to have been given the honour to tour the Ghanaian Parliament.
With her recent involvement in the general elections,
Buumba seems to have gone through what other women face in politics.
Writing on Facebook recently, she complained of the
stereotypes that women in politics usually face.
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Buumba with former Energy Minister Dora Siliya |
“I was not
shocked when i was called a prostitute and all sorts of names……. From time in
memorial, I have seen how women who have stepped up the ladder of leadership are
victimised,” she said.
Having realised that the campaigns ahead of the
general elections divided her electorates, Buumba has now embarked on a mission
to unite her ward.
“These elections definitely brought a lot of pain and
separated a lot of people and my community was not an exception. Today I held a
reconciliation meeting with all the traditional, civic and other leaders in my
ward as we prepare for a public meeting where I will address my people for the
first time after elections.
We also successfully elected our
leaders for the Ward Development committee putting the past behind us and
moving towards development as a ward.”
Her Plans Beyond 2016
Her election as a Councillor for
Magoba ward has not made Buumba relaxed, she is still aiming high.
She has just announced her intention
to challenge other elected councillors to contest as the Deputy Council
Chairperson for Kafue District.
Three other councillors have also expressed interest to contest the position.
Buumba says women need to be
represented in the Council and the fact that the Council Chairperson is a man
will make it easy for her to campaign as a female candidate.