US Ambassador Whitman tours Shofco projects in Kibera
United States Ambassador to Kenya Meg Whitman being led on a tour of Shofco projects in Kibera by Dr. Kennedy Odede. PHOTO| COURTESY
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United States Ambassador to Kenya Meg
Whitman visited Shining Hope for Communities (Shofco) in Kibera to see
humanitarian projects being undertaken by the organization led by renowned social entrepreneur
Dr. Kennedy Odede.
Amb. Whitman lauded Shofco’s efforts to create jobs for women and youth nationally.
“I enjoyed warm hospitality from Kibera residents when I visited @hope2shine SHOFCO) community empowerment projects that are creating jobs for women and youth and improving sanitation and access to clean water. Remarkable!” the US Ambassador tweeted.
The organization currently employees 800 people directly, most of whom are drawn from the communities it serves across Kenya.
Whitman’s visit to Shofco came a month after Dr. Odede was appointed to the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Advisory Board by the US government.
The appointment came less than two years
after the Shofco founder and CEO hosted USAID boss Samantha Power at the
inaugural World Communities Forum where he shared with her, alongside other
global leaders, how his focus on community-driven change has seen him impact
over three million slum dwellers in Kenya through various causes.
The all-powerful committee, which will
serve for three years, has membership from leading experts representing NGOs,
private sector, academia and civil society drawn from across the globe.
“The committee’s new membership is comprised of internationally recognised leaders representing a broad range of sectors who will support the Agency’s mission and goals by advising on key development challenges and priorities,” said Power in her statement confirming the appointments.
Founded in 2004 in Kibera, Shofco has now
spread to 24 counties across Kenya impacting over three million vulnerable
people annually.
The organization is at the forefront of catalyzing
large-scale transformation in urban slums by providing community advocacy
platforms, education and leadership development for women and girls, and
critical services for all which include water and healthcare.
Dr. Odede and his ever-expanding team are
addressing the top six SDGs (no poverty, zero hunger, good health and
well-being, quality education, gender equality, and clean water and sanitation)
by giving job opportunities to slum dwellers, providing tuition-free education
to disadvantaged girls, and free meals in school.
Shofco is currently running two girls’
schools in Mathare and Kibera where over 800 students are studying free charge.
On the issue of good health and
well-being, for example, Shofco has created seven medical clinics while 29
water kiosks (24 in Kibera and five in Mathare slums) address the water problem.
Through its Shofco Urban Network (SUN)
program, the organization brings together individuals and households through
social groups run independently using its services and organizes them to
actively seek tangible change in their community and society at large.
SUN seeks to build a strong urban network
with the vision of giving the urban poor a voice.
The network currently has over two million members across Kenya and has held the organization together by identifying the most pressing challenges in their communities that need to be addressed.


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