Kenyan Lilian Seenoi-Barr makes history as first Black mayor in Northern Ireland
Lilian Seenoi-Barr is the new mayor of Derry City in Northern Ireland, U.K. | PHOTO: @Lseenoi/X
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In a first for a Black person, Kenyan Lilian Seenoi-Barr on Monday received the mayoral chain of office becoming the mayor of Derry City and Strabane District Council in the United Kingdom’s Northern Ireland.
Seenoi-Barr was in April selected by the Social Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) to become the next Derry mayor.
Ahead of the handing-over ceremony, she told the BBC
in an interview that she arrived in Derry City as a refugee 14 years ago.
“It is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,
something you don't prepare for. I am delighted that I have been given the
opportunity to serve my community. Derry has given me so much. A family, a
husband and a place I call home," she said.
Seenoi-Barr became Northern Ireland's
first Black mayor and only the third on the island of Ireland, according to the
British public broadcaster.
Seenoi-Barr is from Mau Narok in Nakuru
County and is a sister to Narok Senator Ledama Olekina.
Olekina and their other three siblings attended the swearing-in ceremony at Guildhall in Dery, alongside a raft
of other Kenyan politicians among them Nairobi Senator Edwin Sifuna.
Sifuna on Monday afternoon shared a photo
with Seenoi-Barr and the outgoing Mayor of Derry Patricia Logue ahead of the event,
terming it “a proud moment for Kenya.”
While her selection was criticised by some SDLP
members as undemocratic, Seenoi-Barr in April defended it as being open.
At the time, she said that she would be “a
mayor for everyone and represent every single voice.”
Seenoi-Barr has previously made history
after being elected councillor of the Foyleside area of Derry and Strabane
Council in Northern Ireland in May last year.
She describes herself as a community
development practitioner and social justice advocate.
Seenoi-Barr is the founder of the North
West Migrants Forum, which supports, advises and cares for Black and ethnic
minority groups living in the North-west region of Northern Ireland.
According to her professional profile, she
is an alumnus of the University of Ulster and has also been involved with
Maasai women’s and girls’ rights causes back home in Kenya by rescuing young
girls from early forced marriage and female genital mutilation.


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