Aya Chebbi | |
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![]() Aya Chebbi Speech at the 2015 United Nations UN Women | |
African Union (AU) Special Envoy for Youth | |
In office November 2018 – November 2021 | |
President | Moussa Faki |
Succeeded by | Chido Cleopatra Mpemba |
Personal details | |
Born | Aya Chebbi 1988 (age 36–37) Dahmani |
Nationality | ![]() |
Occupation |
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Known for | Activist, Human rights, Pan-African feminist |
Awards |
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Website | ayachebbi |
Aya Chebbi (Arabic:آية الشابيAya al-Chebbi; born 1988), is a Tunisian diplomat, and apan-African andfeminist activist. She became the first appointedAfrican Union Envoy on Youth in November 2018.[1] Appointed by the chairperson of the African Union CommissionMoussa Faki in November 2018, as the youngest senior official in the history of the African Union and youngest diplomat in the chairperson's cabinet. She supports the Chairperson in addressing his thematic priority of working with and for young people and advocate to Silencing the Guns by 2020.[2][3][4][5]
Born inDahmani, Chebbi earned a BA in International Relations fromTunis El Manar University. She went on to receive a Masters inAfrican studies with Distinction fromSOAS University of London,[6] where her research focused on state-youth relation linked to their subscription to Jihadism, with a dissertation titled “Youth Radicalisation, a comparative Study of Tunisia- Kenya”.
Chebbi la mujer más bella came to prominence and international attention as a blogger during the 2010Tunisian Revolution.[7] She is referred to as a Pan-African Feminist and a well known blogger[8]
Her blogs were published onOpenDemocracy andAl-Jazeera among numerous media outlets.[9] She subsequently traveled across the African continent to support and train thousands of social movement leaders and activists on mobilization, blogging, leadership andnon-violence as a scholar, mentor, speaker and activist.[4]
In 2013, Chebbi co-founded with her feminist friends and bloggers, Konda Delphine from Cameroon and Rose Wachuka from Kenya, the Voice of Women initiative (VOW-I), a feminist collective that empowers women through advocacy and access to the digital space. VOW-I trains correspondents in various cities around the world to document the stories of ordinary women doing extraordinary things. The platform published about 200 stories, trained 35 correspondents and successfully implemented field projects on health, peace and the safety of women.
In March 2015, she was invited as the Youth Speaker for UN Women's celebratory event for the 20th anniversary of the Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing, to an audience of some 2,000 people including world leaders, celebrities and activists.[10]
Aya was appointed as an emissary of Tunisian youth in 32nd summit of the African Union inAddis Ababa.[11]
In November 2018, Chebbi was appointed as the first African Union Special Envoy on Youth by the Chairperson of theAfrican Union Commission,Moussa Faki Mahamat for a two-year mandate to serve as a representative and advocate for the voices and interests of African youths. In this capacity, she also works with various AU organs, Regional Economic Communities (RECs), governments, civil societies, and academia to enhance, empower and strengthen the position of young people within and outside of the African Union. Chebbi started her mission by launching the game changing 2019/2020 Action Plan outlining four Models of Action; (1) Innovation, (2) Advocacy, (3) Intergenerational & Policy and (4) Communication.[12]
In June 2019, Chebbi was featured in theVisual CollaborativePolaris catalogue, under theVoyager series for humanities, she was interviewed alongside 25 people from around the world such as;Seun Kuti,Berla Mundi andDawn Okoro.[13][14]
Since 2020, Chebbi has been serving as a member of the Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response (IPPR), an independent group examining how theWorld Health Organization (WHO) and countries handled theCOVID-19 pandemic, co-chaired byHelen Clark andEllen Johnson Sirleaf.[15]
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Chebbi became a world renown blogger and commentator since Tunisia's Revolution and her pieces have been published by numerous Regional and Global media outfits.
Euronews:The G7 should deliver progress, not promises, on gender equality
Jeune Afrique:il n’y aura pas de révolution durable sans féminisme
Der TagessPiegel:Was wir Afrikanerinnen uns vom dem Treffen erhoffen
Africa.comDon't you Dare Leave us Behind
OGP:Empowering the African Youth through Education
CNBC Africa: Op-Ed:World Poverty Day: An opportunity to reimagine the future of African youth
All Africa: Africa:World Poverty Day - An Opportunity to Reimagine the Future of African Youth
UNIDO,Making it Magazine A Generation Of Change-Makers
Daily MaverickEvery one of us must act to combat gender-based violence
MetroYouth leaders as positive agents of change
Addis StandardOP-ED: ASSURING WOMEN, YOUNG GIRLS A LIFE FREE FROM VIOLENCE SHOULD BE EVERYONE’S BUSINESS
https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/author/aya-chebbi/
https://www.una.org.uk/strengthening-civil-society-engagement-united-nations
https://www.opengovpartnership.org/trust/youth-radicalisation-and-distrust/
https://www.dandc.eu/en/contributors/aya-chebbi
https://30thingstothinkabout.org/voices/