Africa-Press – Uganda. MTN Uganda, in partnership with Smart Girls Foundation, has graduated 298 youths under its Girls in Tech and Girls with Tools initiatives, expanding efforts to reduce youth unemployment and close the digital skills gap in one of Africa’s youngest nations.
The cohort included 248 female youth trained in ICT skills and 50 learners equipped with vocational competencies in male-dominated trades such as electrical installation, plumbing, and tailoring. The programme is part of MTN’s broader investment in youth empowerment under its Ambition 2025 strategy, which seeks to accelerate Africa’s digital transformation.
“Today, these graduates prove that change is not only possible; it is happening,” said Juliet Kakayi Nsubuga, Managing Director of Bayobab Uganda, MTN Group’s fibre and digital infrastructure unit. “They are equipped to lead Uganda’s digital future, and we are proud to stand with them on this journey.”
Uganda, with over 70% of its population under 30, faces persistent youth unemployment, which currently stands at 16.3%, according to the Uganda Bureau of Statistics. For young women, the challenges are exacerbated by limited access to technology, skills, and financing.
Since 2019, MTN Uganda and Smart Girls Foundation have trained over 1,100 youths, mainly females, in digital and ICT skills, and 116 others in vocational trades. The programme aligns with Uganda’s Vision 2040, the fourth National Development Plan and the UN Sustainable Development Goals, which emphasise education, innovation, and gender equality.
“This partnership has scaled significantly over the past few years,” said Jamila Mayanja, founder of Smart Girls Foundation. “We started with 30 girls in mechanics. Today, we’re talking about hundreds of young women stepping into high-potential sectors like tech and energy.”
Graduates like Nicholas Otim, who completed the ICT training, see the programme as a springboard to entrepreneurship. “I now have the confidence and technical knowledge to launch my own digital skills training centre for girls in my community,” she said.
Maria Nakibule, a graduate in plumbing, said the training has given her a “clearer path to income and independence.”
Government officials at the event welcomed the initiative’s alignment with national education priorities.
“What we’re seeing here is not just training; it’s transformation,” said Maria Lubega, Deputy Resident District Commissioner, Kasangati Town Council, Wakiso District. “This is the kind of public-private effort that can shift the narrative for our youth.”
MTN’s investment in this initiative, alongside others such as MTN Ace programme and the MTN Skills Academy is part of its push to extend digital inclusion across Uganda and to ensure that young people, particularly women, are not left behind in the continent’s growing tech economy.
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