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My performance as WTO DG will open doors for Africans, women, says Okonjo-Iweala

THE newly appointed Director General of the World Trade Organisation, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala has said she is unabashedly African and nothing will make her disown her ancestry.

She said this ahead of her assumption of the Geneva-based office of the WTO in March 1.

The ex-World Bank director, who has received glowing global applause since her emergence as the new WTO boss this week, noted that she would do her level best to do Africa proud and ensure her performance in office between March this year and August 31, 2025, will open doors for Africans and women to lead international organisations.

Known for many firsts including the first female finance minister in Nigeria and now the first female WTO DG, the 66-year-old Harvard graduate said she hopes her record-breaking wand will pave the way for other competent women to reach the top of the ladder of international organisations.

She said this during an interview she granted Arise TV today.

She said, “I am proud for Africa, I am proud to be Nigerian and I am proud for women but the bottom line is capability to do the job and to deliver so that after me, there will be women, there will be other Africans, that is the whole point.

“Multilateral economic organisations need to have women. I have actually just published a book with the former Prime Minister of Australia about leadership talking about the fact that there is a dearth of women at the top even though a lot of progress has been made but it is too slow. This is an opportunity to have a woman leading a multilateral organisation.

“Opening this door as I did when I became finance minister, when I was given the opportunity to serve my country by (ex-) President Olusegun Obasanjo and then by (ex-) President Goodluck Jonathan, I focused on trying to deliver and worked round the clock because I recognised that if I could do a good job, people will no longer have inhibitions about giving women the job and that was a very big objective for me and it worked.

“Since I had the job, there have been three other women who have been nominated. In fact, it is becoming a norm to put a woman as finance minister and that is the impact I wanted to make.

“Similarly, here for the WTO, this is a very important multilateral. In the 73 years of the GATT –General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade which turned into the WTO, there have not been any women.

“With this opening, I hope I will do a good job which I will very much focus on doing. Women will have the door open and Africans will have the door open and that is really an important thing.”

Okonjo-Iweala, who also serves on Twitter’s board of directors, chair of the GAVI vaccine alliance as well as a special envoy for the World Health Organisation’s COVID-19 fight, said she will serve all 164 member states of the WTO.

“I’m there to serve all members. Delivering a result is not just about delivering for my continent or developing countries, it is also about delivering for the entire membership because it is a multilateral organisation, so I have to serve everybody.

“So, it means a lot to me but it is also a burden in a way because I have got to do well. It is not just going around saying you are African, you must perform and that for me, is first and foremost, I have to work really hard to make sure the problems are solved for everyone, every member of the WTO,” she said.

Okonjo-Iweala stressed some of her key priority areas as she resumes office next month.

She said, “I also have to bring value to my continent. So, my being there is not just to be there as an African but it is about what I can do. We have the African Continental Free Trade Area that has just been signed. How can the WTO help make that a solid gain for the continent? That is one thing for the continent.

“Least developed countries, the poorest countries in the world, they have particular problems if you listen to my speech, I mentioned every often, some of the institutional things that can be accessed at the WTO is not so easy for them because they don’t have the capacity and the wherewithal. So, how do we solve the problems of least developed countries?

“Then you come to the bigger countries –the EU, the US, China, all these also have their needs and their priorities, so, how are you going to be able to unlock all these and bridge divides, so, it is going to be very challenging and also an exciting one and I feel with utmost humility to be there.”

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