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OPINION
By RTN Kalikumutima Deo
Every year, the world pauses on International Women’s Day to celebrate women. Speeches are delivered, statistics are shared, and the language of empowerment fills conference halls, policy papers, and social media.
Yet perhaps the most honest question we should ask is a quieter one:
Have we truly understood what women’s empowerment means; or have we merely celebrated the idea of it?
The 2026 theme, “Give to Gain,” appears deceptively simple. It suggests that when societies invest in women, the benefits multiply across families, institutions, and economies. But beneath that phrase lies a deeper truth: women have never been passive recipients of opportunity. They have been its most strategic stewards.
Across Africa, women have taken every small opening in law, policy, fintech and economics and transformed it into something far greater than anyone anticipated.
The real story of women’s empowerment is therefore not about what governments have given.
It is about what women have built with what they were given.
The Quiet Strategy of Women
Women rarely announce evolutions.
They nurture them.
In Uganda, policy frameworks have gradually opened doors: constitutional protections, parliamentary representation, expanded access to education, and economic initiatives led by the Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development.
At the centre of this effort sits the Constitution, which provides for equality and affirmative action. One of the most notable innovations has been the district woman representative system in Parliament, ensuring that every district has a woman speaking directly to national legislation.
The logic behind these interventions is clear: create space for women, and society will benefit.
And indeed, society has reaped the rewards
Women dominate micro-enterprise. They form the backbone of agricultural production. They anchor grassroots savings groups. They sustain markets, families, and, more recently, boardrooms.
Programs such as the Uganda Women Entrepreneurship Programme have enabled thousands of women; in both rural and urban communities to build businesses: poultry farms, tailoring workshops, agro-processing ventures, and retail enterprises.
But if we are honest, something even deeper has occurred.
Women have turned empowerment into infrastructure.
Give a woman access to capital, and she builds a business.
Give her land, and she creates security.
Give her education, and she multiplies opportunity not only for herself, but for an entire generation.
As the famous observation reminds us:
Educate a man, and you educate an individual; educate a woman, and you educate a generation.
History continues to affirm the wisdom of that insight.
What Our Neighbours Have Understood
Uganda is not alone in this journey. Across East and Southern Africa, women have quietly reshaped the economic landscape.
In Kenya, women entrepreneurs dominate digital commerce, agricultural cooperatives, and fintech-driven savings groups. The integration of women into mobile banking ecosystems has fundamentally transformed household finance.
In Tanzania, women’s agricultural and fisheries cooperatives have evolved into engines of rural productivity, turning small-scale activities into structured value chains.
In South Africa, women have advanced decisively into corporate leadership, law, governance, and finance; reshaping boardrooms and regulatory institutions alike.
Across these jurisdictions, the lesson is unmistakable:
Women do not wait for perfect conditions. They move with the opportunities that exist.
As writer Audre Lorde once observed:
“Revolution is not a one-time event.”
Women across Africa appear to understand this instinctively. Empowerment is not a moment of recognition. It is a long-term strategy.
It should also be seen as a mirror.
A mirror asking society a simple but profound question:
If we truly believe in the power of women, are we ready for the transformation that belief requires?
History is quietly revealing a remarkable truth:
When you give women opportunity, they do not simply rise.They rebuild the world around them.
Author
RTN Kalikumutima Deo
Kalikumutima & Co. Advocates