Mrs Peagie Woobay, Founder/Chief Executive Officer, Peagie Woobay Scholarship Fund
Global incarnator is
an online news outlet. It serves as news distribution hub for social networks,
tabloids in Sierra Leone and the global society. GI further plays the role of
an information store for desk research. The exclusive interview with Peagie
Woobay Scholarship fund was borne out of GI’s passion for innovation and the global
campaign for increasing private sector (both profit-making and non-for-profit
organisations) participation to nation building.
Global Incarnator:
We understood you are the founder of Peagie Woobay Scholarship Fund, what
inspired the establishment of the fund?
Peagie Woobay(Mrs):
It is my story, my dream, to help educate as much girls in Sierra Leone as
possible but especially to give a second chance to girls who had dropped out of
school due to teenage pregnancy. I have walked the walk of these girls as a
teenage mother at age 15 but did not drop out due to the support and second
chance given to me by my parents, so it has always been my dream to help the
teenage mums get a decent education and not be marginalised in society.
Global Incarnator:
The managing editor for the GI informed us that, “he registered Voluntary
Teachers’ Association in the Gambia smoothly without bribery and minimal
protocol”, how did the registration process of the Peagie Woobay Scholarship
fund go?
Peagie Woobay (Mrs):
It was bit slow but went well and I did not bribe anyone. I refused to bribe so
maybe that is why it took longer for the certificate to be signed but I kept pressing
the office of Social Welfare and Gender Affairs and got it after paying the
registration fee of Le500, 000.00 (Five Hundred Thousand Leones) which is the
right fee for a new Non-Governmental Organisation.
Global Incarnator:
It is inevitable that every organisation has criteria for funding, what are
your criteria for funding of your target group?
Peagie Woobay(Mrs):
To benefit from the fund, you need to be a genuine teenage mother that has
dropped-out of school, marginalised in society and having the willingness to go
back to school.
Global Incarnator:
What are the strengths and weaknesses of your organisation?
Peagie Woobay: The
uniqueness or strength of The Peagie Woobay Scholarship Fund is addressing the
problems of both teen mums and their kids, putting the teenage mums back to
school through the scheme, helping them with books and uniforms and providing
free day cares for their kids. Our handicap is due to lack of vehicle to
correctly as yet monitor our girls’ (target group) country wide as we would
have wished. So I do not really call it weakness as it is a problem we can
overcome in the future when funds will permit us to have a vehicle.
Global Incarnator:
What modalities have you put in place to get feedback from your target group or
clients?
Peagie Woobay: The
foundation has well trained staffs that have the passion to carry out The
Peagie Woobay dream of empowering girls through education. The staff is made up
of nine members; a Country Director, Admin & Finance Officer and a Senior
Adviser who shares Peagie’s dream of giving a second chance to the teenage
mums, talking to parents to have healthy sex conversation with their girls and
put them on preventive methods as and when necessary. The day cares staff makes
sure the kids are well taken care of in a healthy friendly environment.
Global Incarnator: If there are feedbacks from your
target group, what did the organisation gather from them?
Peagie Woobay: The
girls have been in school for two terms and have been doing very well. They are
monitored monthly and for the teenage mothers weekly. It was a bit difficult
for the teenage mothers to integrate during the first term in school. Their
peer groups were a bit sometimes hard on them through their looks but my team
kept motivating them to be strong and think of the second chance they have had
to go back to school and empower themselves. They are constantly reminded to
have in mind their Role model Peagie who succeeded despite the stigma of a
teenage mother. My team gathered that it is still not easy on them as after
school, they pick up their kids from the centre and return home to a poverty
stricken home. We plan to put in place a dedicated research team during the
month of June to closely find out the reasons for the continuous problems
encountered despite the help already given by the foundation. After the
research procedures will be put in place to further alleviate poverty in the
homes of the teenage mothers (Maybe set up microcredit systems for the mothers
of the teenage mums).
Global Incarnator: On the ground in Sierra Leone
and beyond, how do you describe the support base for your organisation?
Peagie Woobay: The
support base has been awesome which I immensely appreciate. It is principally
made up of family, friends and people who have just seen my work done for the
girls barely a year and have believed in me.
Global Incarnator: It is incumbent on every
organisation to respond to the global call for Corporate Social Responsibility
(CSR), meaning organisations are required to keep to their obligations to
stakeholders, what is your organisation doing to meet its obligations to
stakeholders (say employees, management, government, pressure groups, target
group, community in which the organisation is operating, etc.)?
Peagie Woobay: The
foundation has the flair for keeping to the principle of accountability and
transparency, and promoting sound reporting culture to stakeholders. We keep records of our income and expenditure,
justify our expenses, and there are checks and controls put in place to see
that the funds are run correctly and effectively. Where over spending occurs it
is automatically corrected and reduced. The employees are well trained to
respect the monitoring and evaluation process put in place by the foundation,
and there is a strong move to encourage sound employer-employee relationship.
The foundation donated cash to Melquosh foundation in December 2013 for helping
amputees in Sierra Leone. Furthermore, the foundation is working on donating
in May 2014 to Rainbow Foundation aimed at helping rape victims in the country.
Our on-going gift-aid donations are meant to ensure that communities benefit
from our activities. In general, Peagie Woobay Scholarship Fund is striving
hard to promote an amicable environment with stakeholders. Responding to the
call for Corporate Social Responsibility is enshrined in the organisation’s
programme.
Global Incarnator:
How do you want to see the organisation within the next 10 years?
Peagie Woobay: I
want to see the project sustained so it can grow and increase the number of
beneficiaries in order to educate more girls and open more day care centres for
the kids of teenage mothers to enable the drop-out teenage mothers in the
country go back to school.
Global Incarnator:
What other relevant issues do you want share about your organisation?
Peagie Woobay: The
foundation needs funds to grow in order to empower more girls in Sierra Leone
so they can become drivers of progress.
Global Incarnator:
GI is concern about maintaining sound interviewee-interviewer relationship,
what is your view about the interview?
Peagie Woobay: It
has been very accurate and to the point. The interview puts the interviewee in
a very comfortable position to answer the questions of the interviewer. It has
been a pleasure answering the questions and in so doing I have grown as well in
perspective.
Global Incarnator Managing
Editor’s Comment
It is certain
that the move by Peagie Woobay Scholarship Fund is the right direction,
particularly in a country where we have lots of teenage mothers dropping out of
school, either because of weak parental foundation or defective sex education
in schools or peer group pressure or abuse by the privileged as a result of the
poor background of the girl child. Sierra Leone is a nation where a large
proportion of the population are women. Women are nation builders and are faced
with extreme suffering during reproduction. There is gainsaying that, “behind
any successful man there is a woman”. Women have a major role to play towards
nation building and there is the need to empower them to contribute to the
process. Looking at Sierra Leone, women remain to be marginalised in politics
and socio-economic activities. We have a lot to do in appropriately responding
to the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) that relates to the global call for
empowering women. Empowering teenage mothers is a road map to the MDG concern for
encouraging women in any society. I have to commend the Peagie Woobay
Scholarship for working in line with the positive cause of empowering the girl
child. It is time for us all at home and abroad to provide a voluntary support
(whether material or moral or financial) to the organisation and other
organisations pursuing women’s empowerment agenda. The time is ripe for us all
to provide our individual inputs to the development process in Sierra Leone, and
whatever little helps. As I said in a social gathering sometime back, “if you
living in an untidy house with a relative (whether biological or national or
continental or global) that does not believe in cleaning, you continue
tidying-up, as it will come to a time his or her conscience will prompt him or
her to follow”. We have reached a point in Sierra Leone where we do not need to
look at others when contributing to the development process. There is a
national mess out there to clear and we all have a stake in the cleansing.
According to an article published and
authored by Tristan McConnell on Tuesday 28th August 2007 by the Times United
Kingdom, “Sierra Leone brutal civil war ended in 2002, leaving a chartered
economy and devastated population. Five years of peace have followed, during
which hundreds of millions of pounds of aid money has poured into the country,
including £40 million of aid from Britain.
Yet Sierra Leone has stubbornly refused to
show signs of improvement; its six million people are the world’s
second-poorest (only the people of Niger are worse off, according to the
figures from the United Nation’s human development index).
`The private sector is the only way that
Sierra Leone can work its way out of poverty,’ Mr. O’Cathasaigh argues- and he
is not alone in believing this. In a speech on ending poverty delivered at the
UN, Gordon Brown said: `Not only does business have the technology, the skills,
the expertise for wealth and job creation....it is also in your best interest to
help poor countries develop.”
The
article is a wake-up call for our beloved country. We now need to collectively
encourage the private sector (whether profit-making or not-for-profit
organisation) to salvage the nation from its economic malaise. Creating the
right environment for private sector entities can reduce the nation’s alarming
unemployment and pave the way for a boast in the economy. It is irrefutable
that a fair distribution of the nation’s resources for the benefit of the
people that dwell in it can generate a happy and peaceful society for all.
Key:
Global
Incarnator (a,b,c...z)-Tahoma
Peagie Woobay (a,b,c...z)-Cumbria
The Times United
Kingdom (a,b,c...z)- BatangChe
Prince Foday
Managing Editor, Global Incarnator News Online
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