KZN COGTA congratulates local Inkosi on selection for Obama scholarship

The MEC for Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs (COGTA) in KwaZulu-Natal has congratulated Inkosi Sbonelo Mkhize of the AbaMbo Traditional Council on being selected as one of 500 Africans to participate in the first instalment of President Barack Obama Washington Fellowship exchange programme under the Young African Leaders’ Initiative (YALI).

“This is an enormous distinction and a great opportunity for our local Inkosi. We are excited at the prospect of the skills Inkosi Mkhize will acquire in the United States being used for the benefit of his traditional community,” said KZN MEC for COGTA Nomusa Dube-Ncube.

The scholarship entails a six-week professional training on Civic Leadership from one of the best universities in the world, the University of California, Berkeley (UCLA). The aim of the programme is for the Obama administration to invest in the next generation of African leaders who must be between the ages of 25-35.

“We note with pride that over 50,000 applications were received in Africa for this scholarship overall with 4,300 from South Africa. After gruelling interviews, only 500 applicants were chosen from Africa, out of whom 46 are South African and Inkosi Mkhize is one of them,” said Dube-Ncube.

Inkosi Mkhize who previously pursued a career in investment banking in London and Sandton has since his installation as traditional leader served his community with distinction as convener of the Economic Development Portfolio Committee in the KwaZulu-Natal Provincial House of Traditional Leaders and Chairman of the uThukela Local House of Traditional Leaders.

“It is Inkosi’s passion and love for his community that drive his determination to uplift his people through local economic development programmes which he has facilitated in his traditional area despite limited state resources and a general scepticism from the private sector to invest in the development of our rural economies,” said Dube-Ncube.

KZN COGTA believes that Inkosi Mkhize’s stint in the United States will inspire other young traditional leaders to build their personal capacity and maximise socio-economic opportunities for their communities in a manner that effectively takes the ancient institution of traditional leadership into the 21st century.

“It is no secret that the institution of ubuKhosi might have lost some of its appeal, especially to those who have fully adopted metropolitan lifestyles, but Inkosi Mkhize believes that it will continue to have relevance in our country as amaKhosi represent the moral compass of the societies they lead,” said Dube-Ncube.

For more information contact:
KZN COGTA spokesperson
Lennox Mabaso
Cell: 082 884 2403

Province

Share this page

Similar categories to explore