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Naomi Nhiwatiwa

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Nationality
  
Zimbabwe

Naomi Nhiwatiwa httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb5

Born
  
15 April 1941 Umtali (today Mutare) (
1941-04-15
)

Alma mater
  
State University of New York at Buffalo

Portfolio
  
Deputy Minister of Posts and Telecommunications

Died
  
12 April 2012, South Bend, Indiana, United States

Political party
  
Zimbabwe African National Union – Patriotic Front


Naomi Pasiharigutwi Nhiwatiwa (15 April 1941 – 12 April 2012) was a Zimbabwean independence activist and cabinet minister. In the 1990s, she worked for an extended period as a director with the World Health Organization in Brazzaville, Congo.

Biography

Born in Umtali (renamed Mutare in 1982), she studied in the United States at the State University of New York at Buffalo, earning a PhD in Intercultural and Diplomatic Communications in 1979. In the late 1970s, she participated in the first ZANU-PF Women's League meeting at Shai Shai in Mozambique. She became a spokesperson for the party, keen to promote women's emancipation. Following the independence of Zimbabwe in 1980, Nhiwatiwa was one of only five women who became members of parliament for the ruling ZANU–PF party. Alongside Vice-President Joice Mujuru and Victoria Chitepo, as Deputy Minister of Posts and Telecommunications, she was one of Zimbabwe's few female cabinet ministers.

In 1988, she left the government of Zimbabwe to become a senior Unicef official in Nairobi, Kenya. She moved to Brazzaville in 1993 as director responsible for the World Health Organization's external relations for the Africa Region. In 1998, she became a senior advisor to the United Nations in New York.

After retiring from the United Nations in 2001, Nhiwatiwa became a charity worker, founding the Zerapath AIDS Orphanage in Harare. She has also been a visiting professor at Pepperdine University in California.

Naomi Nhiwatiwa died in South Bend, Indiana, on 12 April 2012.

References

Naomi Nhiwatiwa Wikipedia