Penny
Pritzker, US Commerce Secretary, Tony Elumelu, Founder, Tony Elumelu
Foundation, Antonio Gracias, Founder and CEO, Valor Equity and Julie Hanna, Founder and CEO, Kiva during the event |
African
businessman and philanthropist, Tony O. Elumelu has proposed
a new entrepreneur-led development model for Africa at two high profile
events in Washington DC.
Mr.
Elumelu, who is Chairman of United Bank for Africa, and Founder, the
Tony Elumelu Foundation, spoke at a White House event hosted by United
States President Barack Obama on
May 11 to celebrate emerging entrepreneurs around the globe. The event was a prelude to Obama’s scheduled trip to Kenya this summer for the Global Entrepreneurship Summit.
During
remarks to announce the Summit and his plans to participate, President
Obama thanked the global coalition of entrepreneurship organizations
that collaborated
with his administration to launch the Spark campaign for global
entrepreneurship, a campaign in which the Tony Elumelu Foundation is a
founding member. The President went on to say to the entrepreneurs
present, "Entrepreneurship empowers people to no longer
be subject to aid agencies, but to be part of something to pursue their
dreams. Entrepreneurs like you can change the world one idea at a
time."
During
his comments at the White House event while participating on a panel
moderated by United States Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker, Mr
Elumelu championed the
cause of African entrepreneurs as the primary drivers of Africa's
transformation. In closing, Mr Elumelu provided the following advice to
global entrepreneurs, "Entrepreneurship is a long term journey. Great
entrepreneurs are not made overnight. Dare to
dream, implement your dream, and stay focused."
Elumelu’s foundation
recently launched the $100 million Tony Elumelu Foundation
Entrepreneurship Programme, which aims
to assist in growing 10,000 start-up companies across the African
continent over the next 10 years -― demonstrating a commitment to
empowering entrepreneurs to drive Africa’s social and economic
transformation.
Other
speakers that joined Obama and Elumelu to promote entrepreneurship at
the White House event included Mark Cuban, Owner of the Dallas
Mavericks; Barbara Corcoran;
Founder of Barbara Corcoran Venture Partners; Daymond John, CEO and
founder of FUBU — all investors on the hit ABC show Shark Tank; Antonio
Gracias, Founder of Valor Equity Partners; and Julie Hanna, Founder of
Kiva.
Accompanying
Mr Elumelu to the White House was Shadi Sabeh, a young Nigerian
entrepreneur from Sokoto State who is a mentee of Mr Elumelu
and a past winner of the Tony and Awele Elumelu Prize for Economics
from Usman Dan Fodiyo University.
Following
on the White House event, Mr. Elumelu delivered a lecture at Georgetown
University in Washington DC on May 12 on the
topic ‘Entrepreneur-Led Development: A New Model for Africa’. The
lecture was attended by a large audience including students, faculty,
and alumni of Georgetown, as well as members of the US and African
private sector, diplomatic core, and international development
sector.
“I
was honoured to speak at these high profile events in the US,” Tony
Elumelu said. “As a successful
entrepreneur, I will continue to communicate to the world the need
for supporting and empowering African entrepreneurs as the most
impactful and sustainable approach to Africa’s development. My mission
is to share this message on a global scale, and inspire
more African business leaders and global investors with an interest in
Africa to take action.”
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