Intelligent CIO Africa Issue 39 | Page 19

//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TRENDING DING CTO CELEBRATES AFRICAN FEMALES WORKING IN TECHNOLOGY Barbara McCarthy, Global CTO at international mobile top-up platform Ding whose African operations are headquartered in Cape Town, tells us about how African women are making a huge contribution to technology. She tells us: “Successful women in technology and the sciences must be celebrated and brought to the fore so that they are visible.” T he theme for International Women’s Day 2020 was #EachforEqual – an equal world is an enabled world. As a woman in technology and one of a very small number of female Chief Technology Officers, I think a lot about the need to champion women in the areas of innovation and technology and to promote the need for equality. As a global business, Ding’s customers come from communities across the world so we see progress through a global lens and it is dispiriting to see that despite enormous progress in secondary school enrolment among girls across the globe, there continues to be a wide gender digital divide in the fields of science, technology, engineering, mathematics (STEM) and design. This is especially so in the developing world’s where many of our customers live, and even more so in Sub-Saharan Africa. It is only right that – with Africa’s soaring youth demographic – we ask a painful question: Can the United Nations’ fifth sustainable development goal on gender equality and www.intelligentcio.com the empowerment of women and girls ever be realised on the African continent? Education is key Before examining women in STEM in Africa, it’s very important to note that this is not a uniquely African challenge: UNESCO intelligence shows that only 35% of students in higher education globally are women – with only 3% in technology. As the Fourth Industrial Revolution evolves and the repercussions of AI and automation unfold, these are alarming figures. This is not a problem that is unique to developing economies – it is perhaps heightened in these regions but it is certainly a global issue. For me personally, education has undoubtedly been the thing that has provided me with the opportunities I have today. Coming from a large family, with parents who were not afforded the benefit of completing their secondary education – their determination to provide me with the best education they could, is “ THE AWARENESS OF THE IMPORTANCE OF EDUCATING AND PROVIDING EQUAL OPPORTUNITIES FOR GIRLS IS GROWING AND IN AFRICA WE KNOW OF COURSE THAT THERE HAS BEEN PROGRESS. INTELLIGENTCIO 19