Sunday, 20 December 2015

At Hove, celebrated Sussex cricketers are honoured with blue banners boasting their portraits. In August Sarah Taylor became the first woman to join this elite group when she was inducted into Legends’ Lane. It was not her only foray into men’s cricket this year. Two months later, Taylor became the first woman to play in an A Grade match in Australia when she turned out for Northern Districts against Port Adelaide at Salisbury Oval.

“There were probably about a million emotions,” she tells The Independent as she looks back on her remarkable achievement. “It was exciting. It was so nerve-racking. It was probably one of the toughest things I’ve ever done on a cricket field, but I can walk away and say I somehow enjoyed every moment of it, including the media hype.”


While she did not bat in the first two-day game, Taylor took two smart catches behind the stumps. In the next match, batting at No 8, she was out for a second-ball duck. “I snicked off behind,” she admits. “I got a pretty decent ball. It’s OK, I’ve not lost any sleep over it.”

Despite the  bigger ball and spending most of her time as wicketkeeper standing back rather than up, the 26-year-old found men’s cricket to be more like the women’s game than she had imagined.  “The main difference was a couple of the words said – but that might just be Australians.”

When other commitments allow, Taylor intends to continue playing men’s cricket. “It definitely helped me and my game, more mentally than anything. If you put your mind to something you can do it – you should always give it a go, even if you fail. I’ll try and play for them as much as I possibly can in the future.”

Taylor is ultimately playing men’s cricket to make herself a better player in women’s international cricket, but she thinks a female will soon decide to devote herself entirely to the men’s game.

“I see no reason why a woman couldn’t say, ‘I want to play men’s cricket’ and keep going with it. I hope it does push the boundaries.

“I’m too far into my career now to start changing but there will be some girls who will try and keep going in the male game. I do hope it happens – it’ll be good for women and good for the game. If you’re trained to play against the guys, you never know what you can do.”

But Taylor has enough in the women’s game to occupy her thoughts. After the disappointment of England losing the multi-format Ashes series 10-6 in the summer – she contributed a disappointing 135 runs in seven innings – Taylor confronted “a lot of sarcastic comments” when she started playing Australian domestic cricket in October.

She is now playing in the inaugural Women’s Big Bash, a female T20 tournament featuring the eight sides who play in the men’s Big Bash. “You’ve got to look to Cricket Australia and say well done to them for pushing this. The excitement here has been amazing,” she says, looking forward to the English equivalent – a six-team Super League which will be launched next year.

“We’re going to learn as much as we can from this as players and try and perform in the Super League next year. If we can generate the same hype back home in England, which I’m pretty sure we can do, I’d like to think the crowds would be even better.”

Taylor’s next England commitments come in February, on the tour of South Africa. It will be the first assignment for new head coach Mark Robinson, who Taylor knows well after coaching his daughter.

“He was so involved and so keen to help out. I think because of his daughter his love for the women’s game has grown and he’s paid so much attention to it. It’s exciting times under him,” she says. “I don’t think he’ll have to do anything different from coaching men.”

Robinson will encounter a side still adjusting to becoming professional cricketers in May last year. Perhaps the most significant change that professionalism has brought is extra scrutiny.

“There’s more responsibility on us being professional and we need to accept the criticism that comes with that.” When England’s women underperform, Taylor wants them to be treated identically to the men. “We should be assessed in exactly the same way. We shouldn’t be any different.”

There was no shortage of criticism after the women’s Ashes Test in the summer: not only did England lose, but many suggested that women should cease playing Test matches altogether and focus on T20s and ODIs instead. Taylor does not agree. “Test matches are my favourite format. We love playing Test cricket – we get to wear whites playing for England, we get to spend four days playing a game that we love together.”


But England’s women will not get to do so next summer, as only ODIs and T20s have been scheduled against Pakistan. “There’s always disappointment. You want Test matches against everyone but you have to be realistic.”

Such frustration is outweighed by excitement at the direction women’s cricket is taking. A further positive sign is that Colin Graves, the England and Wales Cricket Board chairman, recently announced that the board had withdrawn its previous opposition to cricket joining the Olympic Games, moving the sport further towards inclusion in the 2024 Games and the additional funding this would open up to the women’s game around the world. “That would be amazing,” she says. “I’d love to say I went to an Olympics. It would be pretty great and build the women’s game a lot.”

In the meantime England’s women, as one of only two professional cricket nations, approach the World T20 in India in March with the feeling that winning a global event, which they have not done since 2009, is overdue.

“This group of players should be lifting trophies,” she says. “It was a shame about the Ashes loss in the summer. The perfect bounce back would be an ICC Trophy. I don’t see any reason why we should go to India thinking of anything less.”

Neither Taylor nor the women’s game are in the business of lowering their sights.

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Wednesday, 10 June 2015

African Union to honour Joyce Banda, four others as ‘Living Legends’


Malawi’s former President Joyce Banda will be among five leading African women who will be honoured by the African Union (AU) at its 25th Summit, which will be held at Michelangelo Hotel, Sandton in Johannesburg, South Africa from June 11 to 13, 2015.
joyce Banda : Malawi ex-president to be honoutred by African Union
The five will receive the ‘Living Legend’ Award.

Banda will be honoured alongside Nigerian Dorothy Anyiam-Osigwe, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, President of Liberia and the first female Head of State on the continent, Dhlamini Zuma, current AU Chairperson and Winnie Mandela, South African anti-apartheid heroine and wife of former President of South Africa, late Nelson Mandela.

An entrepreneur, activist, politician, and philanthropist, Banda was President of the Republic of Malawi (2012-2014). She was Malawi’s first female president and Africa’s second. She is married to retired Chief Justice Richard Banda.

Voted as Africa’s most powerful woman by Forbes Magazine for two years running and voted as one of the most powerful women in the world by the influential Time Magazine, Banda is a strong advocate for women, children, the disabled, and other marginalized groups’ emancipation and empowerment. She is a prominent civil rights campaigner.
Before becoming President of Malawi, Banda served as a Member of Parliament; Minister of Gender and Child Welfare; and Foreign Affairs Minister and Vice President of the Republic of Malawi.
While serving as Minister of Gender and Child Welfare, Banda championed the enactment of the Prevention of Domestic Violence Bill in 2006, which provides a legal framework for the elimination and prevention of all forms of violence against women and girls.
She is a recipient of more than 15 international accolades including the “Hunger Project Africa Prize for Leadership for the Sustainable End of Hunger” shared with President Joaquim Chissano of Mozambique in 1997. Using part of the prize money, she established the Joyce Banda Foundation in 1997.

The Foundation provides integrated rural development services to hundreds of thousands of resource poor beneficiaries. The services that the Foundation also provides include free secondary school for orphans, early childhood development and orphan care, youth development, food and Income Security, Maternal health and Safe motherhood, Water and Sanitation, Women’s leadership, Economic Development for women.

According to Dr. Erieka Bennett, Head of Mission (AU) Diaspora African Forum Committee, the continental body chose Anyiam-Osigwe, the only non-political leader among the awardees, “because of her commitment to the political, social and economic impact on Africa and the African Diaspora”.
The theme of the 25th Summit of the AU is ‘Year of Women Empowerment and Development Towards Africa’s Agenda 2063”.

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The luncheon highlighted the progress the world has made in the 20 years since the historic UN conference on women in Beijing and the need to step up efforts to make gender equality a reality. It celebrated the power


of investing in girls and women to drive change.

Among the high profile guests in attendance were United States of America Deputy Secretary of State Heather Higginbottom, Grammy Award-winning violinist,Miri Ben-Ari, and other high profile global youth advocates.

Additionally, to commemorate International Women’s Day, UN Foundation leaders are writing about the world they picture for girls and women in 2030 and how to achieve it. It is about setting a platform of vision for the youth, especially girls, and creating a roadmap for them to reach their full potential in life.

Each year the UN Foundation Girl’s Up Campaign celebrates International Women’s Day by honoring a young girl for outstanding achievement on the improvement of the lives of girls.

This year under the theme ‘Girls Count’ campaign, UN Foundation decided to honour a young lady advocate of 18 years named Kennede Reese. Dr. Joyce Banda presented this young lady with her award from the UN Foundation

Kennede has been recognized for her gallant fight to have all girls born in America registered as well as help prevent discrimination against baby girls. These rights would only be possible after the passing of a bill that Kennede helped to lobby for.

The passing of this bill sent a strong message to the world that girls deserve to be recognized and their rights must be protected. Advocates like Kennede could play a leadership role in working toward these rights around the globe.


Kennede has been volunteering at the local level since the age of 12. She is a part of the Girl Up campaign as a teen advisor and she is no ordinary teenage. Soon after she joined Girls Up as a part of the UN Foundation as a teen advisor she opened a branch in Colorado called SMARRTT GIRL.

Even though she is just a senior at St. Mary’s Academy in Colorado, Kennede has gone above and beyond to advocate for girls in her state of Colorado as well as across America.

From the initial introduction of the Girls Count Campaign in 2013, Kennede worked hard to support the bill and called on members of Congress to do the same. Kennede did not stop there. In May of 2014, she lobbied

with senators and set up meetings to talk about the issues at hand. Once the bill was introduced to the senate she continued to meet with senators and follow with the senate offices vigorously. This past fall she participated in calling congressional offices to push for passing of this bill Congressional offices.

Presenting the Award on behalf of the UN Foundation, Banda congratulated Kennede for her courage. At her age she has taken her lobby all the way to the White House.

Banda said the onus is on world leaders and all adults to create space for young girls that demonstrate leadership qualities to take their rightful place in society and empower fellow girls.

“Girls like Kennede need our full support and encouragement,” said the first woman Head of State of Malawi.

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