-
Sipho Dlamini
- January 15, 2021
- Posted by: Michael Umoh
- Categories:
No CommentsA strategic leader with 20 years’ experience in live production, festivals, the recording industry, artist management, television production, marketing and operations for Africa’s largest collection society. Sipho was Vice-President, Creative Kingdom Records USA; VP, Operations, Centre Stage Management, Dubai, Los Angeles; Partner, IAAM Entertainment and CEO, SAMRO.
The South African Government and FIFA engaged Sipho to produce ceremonies for FIFA’s Confederations Cup and 2010’s World Cup, making him one of the creative architects for these momentous occasions.
Sipho oversees Universal Music in Sub-Saharan Africa, expanding into West Africa with companies in Nigeria and Kenya, via the acquisition of AI Records.
-
Oumar Diouf
- January 15, 2021
- Posted by: Michael Umoh
- Categories:
Chef Oumar Diouf was born in Senegal. He got his start cooking at age 13, when his father passed away. He helped his mother out in the kitchen until he went to college. After college, he headed to Argentina to pursue a career in soccer. When an injury sidelined his career, Diouf decided to attend culinary school. He went on to own restaurants in Argentina — his first was selling pizza and empanadas — then moved to Brazil, where he worked in hotels and catering businesses. In his journey after culinary school, Oumar has worked with and led many different teams in several restaurants in Argentina, Brazil, and the United States ranging from casual dining to luxury fine dining.
During the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, Oumar proudly led a kitchen team in charge of cooking for five Houses: the NBA House, Australian Olympic Center, New Balance’s House, Casa Cartan and Casa Time Brazil. The daily number of guests to serve exceeded five thousand people.
During his time in Brazil, Oumar was struck by the similarities between Brazilian cuisine and the food he ate growing up. “In Bahia, which is the north of Brazil … about 80 percent of their food was actually brought by slaves 500 years ago,” Oumar said. “So those cooking style techniques, even the names are very close from Africa — especially West Africa.”
Those similarities, along with an Anthony Bourdain episode about the Bahia region, inspired Oumar to pursue an Afro-Brazilian style of cooking. In 2016, Oumar moved to the Bay Area, and started a catering company called Afro-Brazilian Cuisine (ABC). In addition to ABC, Oumar also owns and cooks at the Damel, an Afro-Brazilian restaurant in Oakland. The name Damel was the title given to the king of Wolof Kingdom of Cayor which was located in modern day Dakar, the capital of Senegal.
At The Damel, Oumar set out to tell his story through cuisine, the menu reflecting his lived experience in Senegal, Argentina, and Brazil. Above all, Oumar’s goal is to demonstrate the influence of African cuisine — not just in Brazil, but all over the world.
“A lot of dance has African background, a lot of fashion has African background, but food, too, has an African background,” Oumar said. “And that’s what I want to stand for — to try to take back what’s from us and have people that want to find more about their ancestors … eating the same food their ancestors brought from Africa to here.” Oumar uses the best local ingredients to create a fusion between traditional culinary and global cooking.
-
Busola Dakolo
- January 15, 2021
- Posted by: Michael Umoh
- Categories:
Busola Dakolo (Nee Amupitan) is a Nigerian professional photographer and content creator. An alumnus of the New York Film Academy, Busola started her photography career by harnessing the power and flexibility of online learning whilst working as a freelance consultant for Information Technology (IT) companies.
Now the CEO of Busola Dakolo Images, a photography studio, where she specialises in Personal Branding Photography and social impact photos, Busola honed her skills early on by taking countless pictures of her children. Busola is committed to consistently producing compelling images and executing expressive visual digital storytelling projects and enjoys working with a team of young photographers and visual artists to capture memorable moments for her clients.
Busola is passionate about learning and helping young people all over the world gain access to global opportunities. In line with this mission, she founded SkillsKitchen.com, an online skills acquisition and development platform in 2019. SkillsKitchen has attracted over 5,000 registered participants within the first two years, more than 3,000 of whom are very active on the platform.
Busola is also a firm believer in gender equality and has lent her voice to various campaigns with various organisations — including the European Union, to help victims of domestic and sexual violence access care, counselling and other relevant support. She was named in This Day newspaper’s Game Changers of 2019 list in recognition of her social impact efforts.
Busola started her career in 2005 at Zenith bank where she worked with the e-Business team to deliver strategic business solutions for several companies across industries by driving more efficient business processes and revenue growth. Busola also developed good administrative skills while she worked as the Personal Assistant to the CEO of The West Group Limited, an oil and gas servicing company in Lagos, Nigeria.
Busola holds a bachelor’s degree in Geology and Mineral Resources from the University of Ilorin, Nigeria and has earned a Diploma in Photography from the New York Film Academy, USA.
Busola currently lives in Lagos, Nigeria.
-
Teresa Clarke
- January 15, 2021
- Posted by: Michael Umoh
- Categories:
Teresa Clarke, an investment banker and internet entrepreneur, has been contributing to business and social development in Africa for over twenty years. Ms. Clarke was the first African American woman to serve as a Managing Director in the investment banking division of Goldman Sachs, where she led corporate finance and merger & acquisition deals for clients in the industrial and real estate sectors.
She is now the Chair and CEO of Africa.com, a media holding company that includes a business publishers network, and iAfrica the oldest news portal in South Africa. She serves on the board of Change Financial (publicly traded fintech company) and the Cim Group (publicly traded financial services company).
Ms. Clarke earned an A.B. in Economics, cum-laude, from Harvard College, an M.B.A. from Harvard Business School, and a J.D. from Harvard Law School. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and has lectured at several major universities around the world including Harvard, Wharton, Stanford, Princeton, Wellesley, Tufts, and Oxford.
-
Lucia Brawley
- January 15, 2021
- Posted by: Michael Umoh
- Categories:
-
Ngaire Blankenberg
- January 15, 2021
- Posted by: Michael Umoh
- Categories:
Director, Smithsonian’s National Museum of African Art
-
Omar Ben Yedder
- January 15, 2021
- Posted by: Michael Umoh
- Categories:
Group Publisher & MD, IC Publications | Moderator
-
Hakeem Belo-Osagie
- January 15, 2021
- Posted by: Michael Umoh
- Categories:
Hakeem Belo-Osagie is chair of Metis Capital Partners an organisation focused on brokering and delivering attractive, large-ticket transactions in Africa to select blue chip international investment partners. Hakeem is also the founder and Chairman of the board of FSDH holding company, which includes among its holdings FSDH merchant Bank, FSDH Asset management, PAL pensions and FSDH securities trading company. He was listed by Forbes Magazine as the forty-first richest man in Africa in 2014.
Belo-Osagie started his career as a petroleum economist and lawyer, following his graduation from Harvard Business School. For more than three decades, he has been a key player in the Nigerian economy through his participation in several private sector businesses; particularly in the fields of energy, finance and telecommunications. Up Until 2017, Belo-Osagie was the chairman of Etisalat’s Nigerian arm, in which he controlled a significant stake. He also has a range of other business interests in Nigeria.
Belo-Osagie returned to Nigeria shortly after graduating from Harvard in 1980. He began his career in the service of the Federal Government of Nigeria working in various capacities in the energy sector ranging from Special Assistant to the Presidential Adviser on petroleum and energy, to Secretary of the Oil Policy Review and LNG Committees. He subsequently worked in the Petrochemicals Division of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation. He resigned his appointment in 1986 to set up CTIC, which became a leading energy consulting firm. He also chairs the board of Vitol Nigeria, which is a subsidiary of the Swiss-based Vitol Group, a multinational energy and commodity trading firm.
In 1998 Belo-Osagie became the chairman of the board of directors of The United Bank for Africa Plc (the “UBA”), one of the largest commercial banks in Nigeria. Belo-Osagie is also the founder and Chairman of the board of FSDH holding company, which includes among its holdings FSDH merchant Bank, FSDH Asset management, PAL pensions and FSDH securities trading company.
Belo-Osagie until recently was the chairman of the board of directors of Emerging Markets Telecommunications Services Ltd, a mobile telephone operator which operates in Nigeria under the Etisalat brand. He is the ultimate beneficial owner of a significant stake in the company, which is operated as a joint venture with Mubadala Development Company and the Etisalat group.
Belo-Osagie is the chairman of and main shareholder in Duval Properties Limited, a real estate company currently engaged in developing a major new residential and commercial district at Jabi Lake in Abuja. He also chairs the board of Vitol Nigeria, which is a subsidiary of the Swiss-based Vitol Group, a multinational energy and commodity trading firm.
Belo-Osagie has also recently invested in Andela, which is developing a network of high quality computer science education programmes across the African continent. Andela operates a self-financing model of education: it funds the training of promising young programmers, and generates revenue by supplying its graduates’ services to a range of global clients. Belo-Osagie also sits on Andela’s board.
Belo-Osagie sits on the Global Board of Advisers of the Council on Foreign Relations, a leading non-partisan US think tank. In 2015, Belo-Osagie was appointed to the International Advisory Board of the Brookings Institution in Washington DC, which has been described as the most influential think tank in the world.
Belo-Osagie and his wife both serve as members of Harvard University’s Global Advisory Council. Belo-Osagie is also a member of the Yale University President’s Council on International Activities and the New York University President’s Global Council.
Belo-Osagie was appointed by the Nigerian Minister of the Federal Capital Territory to act as a non-executive chairman of the Abuja Investment Corporation from 2007 to 2011. Belo-Osagie also currently chairs Chocolate City Music Group, a leading Nigerian entertainment company.
Belo-Osagie and his wife are among the largest donors to the African Leadership Academy (the “ALA”), a residential secondary school in Johannesburg that works to educate Africa’s brightest students. Founded in 2008, the highly selective ALA immerses promising young people in a rigorous two-year curriculum of leadership, service and African studies. The ALA network of alumni includes almost four hundred young leaders drawn from forty three countries across the continent. In 2012, the academy unveiled the “Hakeem and Myma Belo-Osagie Wing”, named in recognition of the couple’s support of the ALA and their advocacy on its behalf.
The couple have recently established the “Hakeem and Myma Belo-Osagie Fund for the Promotion of Africa” at Yale University, and are supporters of Harvard University’s Center for African Studies. Belo-Osagie has also endowed a fund to provide scholarships for African students studying at Balliol College, Oxford.
Belo-Osagie serves on the board of Alfanar, a charity which applies the principles of private sector investment to charitable giving to help build sustainable social enterprises throughout the Arab world. He also chairs the Nigerian National Committee for the United World Colleges, which assists the organisation’s member colleges in identifying suitable candidates for their two-year International Baccalaureate scholarship programmes. Mr Belo-Osagie has also funded several scholarships to the United World Colleges.
Back to all Speakers
-
Bediako Kwaku
- January 15, 2021
- Posted by: Michael Umoh
- Categories:
Kwaku Bediako is one of Africa’s leading fashion designers. He is the Creative Director and Founder of Chocolate Clothing, a Ghanaian fashion brand which draws inspiration from the rich African culture, lifestyle, taste and preferences. Chocolate Clothing started operating as a clothing line for women in march 2013 but grew into a men’s wear and later got incorporated in 2018. Chocolate Clothing’s mother-brand, FIGYINA YANKSON, is now capable of handling over 1000 orders a month. The name ‘chocolate’ represents the Afrocentric person; man or woman and also resonates the cravings of its targeted clients.
He won designer of the year 2018/2019 in Ghana, appeared at the Paris fashion week where he had alliances with louis vitton, daniel hechter, Schiaparelli and Jean Paul Gaultier and showcased at the Paris Peace Forum – the fashion show organized by the EU, AFRICAN FASHION FUND, UN ITC-EFI and ethical fashion.
In November 2018, Kwaku participated in a showcase banquet held by the President of Ghana in honor of HRH, the Prince of Wales and his wife Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall during their five-day state visit.
Kwaku has dressed celebrities including the CEO of NAACP, Steve Harvey, Boris Kodjoe, Cardi B, Danny Glover, Jamie Foxx, Colin Kaepernick, Jidenna and Jack Dorsey to name a few.
-
James E. Bartlett
- January 15, 2021
- Posted by: Michael Umoh
- Categories:
James E. Bartlett, is an arts entrepreneur, curator, and founding partner of OpenArt, a company dedicated to making the art world more transparent and accessible. From 2012 to 2018, he served as Executive Director of the Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts (MoCADA), in Brooklyn, New York. There he curated multiple exhibitions and led a $10 million dollar capital campaign for the development of the museum’s new building.
Most recently, he co-curated the 2020 exhibition, Derrick Adams: Buoyant, for the Hudson River Museum, and MFA St. Petersburg. He holds a Global Executive MBA from IESE Business School, a M.S. in Publishing and Media Studies from New York University, and a BA from Loyola University.