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Kenya’s envoy to France appointed IFAW board member

Prof Wakhungu is the immediate former Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources/FILE – COURTESY

NAIROBI,Kenya, Jul 8 – Kenyan Ambassador to France, Prof Judi Wakhungu, has been appointed to the Board of the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) – a leading global wildlife conservation and animal welfare organization.

Prof Wakhungu is the immediate former Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources.

“We have had the pleasure of working with Prof. Wakhungu for many years and she has been present for some of ifaw’s biggest milestones in East Africa, including the signing of the lease agreement for land in Kitenden with the community at Olgulului Ololarashi Group Ranch,” says Azzedine Downes, IFAW’s President and Chief Executive Officer.

“We share an equal dedication to and passion for wildlife and are thrilled to welcome her to our Board of Directors.”

During her tenure from 2013 to 2018, she enacted substantive binding laws for the protection of the environment in Kenya including the Climate Change Act 2016 and the Wildlife Conservation and Management Act 2013.

In 2016, Prof Wakhungu championed the largest ever destruction of ivory and rhino horn in recent history by burning Kenya’s entire stockpile of over 100 tonnes of ivory and rhino horn.

In 2017, she facilitated the enactment of a nation-wide ban on the use of plastic polythene bags.

Prior to her appointment as Cabinet Secretary, she was the Executive Director of the African Centre for Technology Studies (ACTS) in Nairobi, from 2002 to 2013.

The ACTS is the Nairobi-based international inter-governmental science, technology, and environmental policy think-tank that generates and disseminates new knowledge through policy analysis, capacity building, and outreach.

She spent several years at the Pennsylvania State University, where she served as an Associate Professor, Science, Technology, and Society, and as the Director of the Women in Science and Engineering (WISE) Institute.

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Prof Wakhungu is also a member of the Giants Club, which brings visionary leaders together to support the protection of elephants.

Founded in 1969, IFAW rescues wildlife and conserves habitats on land and at sea in over 40 countries.

Its primary mandate in East Africa is wildlife security and habitat protection, securing 26,000 acres of wildlife habitat to safeguard an elephant migration route between Amboseli and Kilimanjaro National Parks and through a project dubbed tenBoma.

IFAW is also working to protect these elephants from wildlife crime across the greater landscape.

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