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Monday, August 4, 2025

ABSA EMPOWERS YOUNG WOMEN IN TECH THROUGH PARTNERSHIP WITH GILRCODE



Absa Bank Kenya has partnered with GirlCode kicking  off the 2025 edition of the GirlCodeHack  a Pan-African women-in-tech Hackathon set to empower 100 young women in Kenya aged 18-35 to solve realtime problems in FinTech,
Cybersecurity, and AI through a 30-hour innovation sprint.


 
Scheduled for October 11-12, 2025  the hackathon will run simultaneously across seven African cities, including Nairobi. Themed “Future-Proofing Africa: Innovation at the Intersection of FinTech, Cybersecurity, and AI”, the winning team will walk away with a grand prize of Kes 725,802. The competition is open to university students, recent graduates, and young professionals, where participants can register in teams of twos to fours.This is more than double the number of participants in last year’s hackathon that the bank is targeting through the ReadytoWork platform, a mobile-based initiative designed to equip youth with digital and employability skills.


“This hackathon is a gateway to opportunity. By creating inclusive spaces like GirlCodeHack, we are not only investing in the future of tech but also advancing key Sustainable Development Goals, especially on quality education, gender equality, and decent work. This is how we ensure young Kenyan women are part of shaping real-world solutions,” said Absa Kenya’s Chief Operations and Digital Officer, Julius Kamau.

In a push to enhance inclusion and diversity, the hackathon has been designed to attract participation from a wide range of counties to ensure nationwide representation. Speaking on Absa’s continued support, Tamu Dutuma, Absa Group’s Head of Strategy and Transformation said that the bank is committed to diversity, inclusion and youth empowerment in technology.

Last year’s competition, which was held across five cities, attracted over 400 young women from across the continent. Kenya’s winning team developed a web application to empower women and girls with accessible, gamified information on sexual and reproductive health. Other standout innovations included a carbon footprint calculator aligned with government caps, a data-driven agriculture platform, AI-powered mental health tools, blockchain-based land registries, and mobile fraud detection solutions for African SMEs.

These innovations showcased the participants’ technical insight, creative thinking, and deep understanding of the local context.


“Our mission is to expose 10 million women and girls to technology by 2030,” said Zandile Mkwanazi, CEO and Founder of GirlCode. “With Absa’s partnership, we are scaling impact and ensuring more women see themselves not just as coders, but as problem-solvers, innovators, and leaders.”

This year’s hackathon will take place in Nairobi, Kampala, Dar es Salaam, Johannesburg, Cape Town, Durban, and Gaborone and will be backed by experienced industry professionals as mentors to guide teams throughout the 30-hour experience. Participants will gain technical skills, mentorship in solving real problems and exposure to Africa’s growing digital economy.


Women aged 18-35 are encouraged to apply by 8th August, 2025 through the ReadytoWork App available on Android and IOS.

 

STATEMENT ON THE FALSE CLAIMS REGARDING THE ALLEGED BOMBING OF NYAALA AND THE FABRICATED ACCUSATIONS OF RECRUITING FOREIGN FIGHTERS

In recent days a coordinated disinformation campaign has been led by certain hostile satellite television channels and social media platform...