Spotlight on Adaora Onyechere Sydney Jack the Birthday Girl !
Adaora Onyechere Sydney-Jack is a multitalented international broadcast journalist, a social innovation and policy communications expert, and a leading advocate for inclusive governance across Africa. A former head of the Women Affairs and Gender Cluster Committee for the African Union ECOSOCC Nigeria and strategic advocacy lead at Human Capital Africa, she has built a formidable reputation as a voice for transformation, equity, and leadership.

She is the host of Gender Agenda on AIT — Africa’s premier programme on gender policy and inclusion — a flagship current affairs show amplifying citizen voices across the continent. As Executive Director of Gender Strategy and Advancement International (GSAI) and Founder of WEWE Network Africa, she drives innovative programmes that promote gender equality, leadership development, youth empowerment, and visibility for women from across Africa across various ecosystems.
Recognised among the 100 Most Influential African Women and Top 20 Outstanding Youths in Africa, Adaora has been honoured by the WAFA World Affirmative Action Honors and commended by the U.S. Congresswomen’s Board for her advocacy in gender and human rights. A former special adviser on information and advocacy to the Imo State Government, she made history as the first female candidate to contest for the Okigwe State Constituency in 2019 and was the first female BOT Chair of the Action Alliance Party.
Through initiatives like Educate Her, under her Yes She Can Africa Annual Summit, she has empowered over 120 young girls toward academic and leadership excellence. She is a leading gender advocate who has prominently championed the passage of the reserved seats for women’s bill in Nigeria.
A Fellow of the Nigerian Institute of Chartered Administrators, Adaora is also a distinguished speech therapist, body language expert, and two-time Toastmasters International Champion who overcame her own speech challenges to become one of Africa’s most sought-after moderators and speakers. She has been featured in numerous global policy dialogues, including the CNN As Equals series, the UN Women Roundtable on Generation Equality, Nigeria-Nordic Connect, the Conference of African Speakers, the British High Commission’s SheLeads Series, and the Nigerian Bar Association Law Week in Abuja.
An accomplished creative, Adaora is a spoken word artist, author of the bestselling Women, Politics, and X on Amazon and Selar, and an acrylic painter whose works and publications — Serendipity, Sceptre, and Anghuli (Happiness) — reflect her passion for leadership, resilience, and human advancement. She is also the female ambassador for cricket at the Nigeria Cricket Federation.
A visionary leader and passionate voice for change, Adaora Onyechere Sydney Jack continues to champion inclusive development — inspiring a generation of women and youth to break barriers and shape the future of Africa.
You overcame your own speech difficulties to become one of Africa’s most well-known voices. Tell us a little bit about your journey.
My journey began with a paradox: As a child, expression and speech were challenging due to speech apraxia resulting from a traumatic experience, and every sentence felt like a mountain to climb, yet what I couldn’t say I wrote in words. Therapy came much later in my adolescence, yet that difficulty taught me something profound—that the power of a voice lies not in how easily it comes out but in what it stands for. For me, it stood for the conviction in my essence.
Today, when people hear me speak on television, at conferences, or in political spaces, they see confidence. What they don’t see are the years of persistence behind it. I often say, ”The voice that changes society is rarely the one born loud; it is the one forged through struggle.” My story is proof that our greatest limitations can become our greatest instruments of impact.
When did you realize that your voice was more than just something personal but also a tool for politics?
After running for office in 2019 to represent my constituency, Okigwe, in Imo State, Nigeria, and seeing the lack of agency and very limited access to publicity for women in politics, especially in the media at the state and community level, I realized with conviction that conversations could influence decisions and decisions could change lives. Broadcast journalism taught me that stories shape public opinion, and advocacy taught me that public opinion shapes policy.
Having frontline conversations and speaking about women’s political representation saw lawmakers, party leaders, and citizens engage differently, I understood that voice is not merely expression, it is power. Politics, at its best, is the organized use of voice to influence the future.
As a broadcast journalist, an advocate, a politician, an artist, and an athlete ambassador, how do you manage all these roles without losing who you are?
On the contrary, it has brought the full expression to the purpose to which I am called, using my voice to amplify the gaps that policy exclusion creates and creating pathways for solutions. I don’t see them as separate identities. They are different expressions of the same mission: expanding opportunities for people, especially women and young people.
Broadcast journalism ignited the urgency and need for inclusive policy advocacy. Advocacy strengthens the outcomes towards inclusive politics. Art nourishes my humanity. Sport teaches discipline. At the centre of all of them is purpose. When purpose is clear, identity remains intact. I don’t wear many hats; I carry one vision through many platforms.
Gender Agenda on AIT has become Africa’s leading platform for talks about gender policies. What need were you meeting when you started, and has that need been met now?
When we started Gender Agenda, there was a significant gap between policy conversations and the people affected by those policies. Gender issues were often discussed in elite spaces and as alternative conversations and were rarely translated into public understanding.
We created a platform that made gender policy accessible, relevant, and actionable. Has the need been met? Not yet. Progress has been made, but until gender equality becomes ordinary rather than exceptional, the conversation remains necessary.
GSAI and WEWE Network Africa are both working on gender equality in different ways. How do you make sure they support each other rather than compete?
I believe movements succeed when they are integrated. GSAI focuses strongly on policy communication, advocacy, research, leadership, mentorship, and political inclusion, while WEWE creates pathways for women’s empowerment and visibility through storytelling and diverse media pathways, WEWE means we are enabling ‘we’ everywhere.
One shapes systems, the other strengthens people. Together, they create a pipeline from empowerment to influence. Social change is too important to become a contest of ideals.
Tell us about The Ivory Circle and the women you are designing this experience for. Who do you envision sitting at the heart of this circle?
The Ivory Circle is for women who are purpose-driven, becoming, and have achieved success but are searching for deeper significance. It is an intimate space for growth, understanding the power of voice, its influence, and access designed for young female leaders between the ages of 18 and 35, professionals, entrepreneurs, and emerging change makers who understand that influence is not just about visibility but about legacy.
At the centre of the circle is the woman who is evolving—the woman asking, “What next?” not because she lacks the understanding of achievement, but because she desires purpose beyond achievement.
There are countless women’s events on the calendar every year. What makes The Ivory Circle different?
Most events focus on networking and intervention. The Ivory Circle focuses on transformation. It is intentionally intimate, deeply reflective, and strategically curated. Its not just a social event, we are creating a space where wisdom, leadership, faith, influence, and legacy intersect.
The goal is not attendance. The goal is elevation.
The Reserved Seats for Women Bill in Nigeria has been a long, hard fight. What is the current status of that fight, and what will it take to finally succeed?
The conversation has moved from whether women deserve representation to how representation can be achieved. That is progress, yet the passage lingers at Nigeria’s 10 parliament, the urgency of passage is even greater now, seeing the drastic exclusion of women at the just-concluded party primaries in Nigeria, and this is worrisome, as this means there could be even fewer women participating in Nigeria’s 2027 elections.
What it will take now is political courage. Data consistently show that Nigeria remains among the countries with the lowest female political representation globally. The bill is not about development, about justice; it is about democratic legitimacy. A democracy cannot be fully representative when half its population remains largely absent from decision-making tables.
Educate Her has helped over 120 girls. What does success mean for one of those girls, and what is her life like five years after the program?
Success is not simply graduation. Success is a choice.
Five years later, I want to see a young woman who can make decisions about her future with confidence and dignity. She may be a journalist, a doctor, an entrepreneur, a teacher, an engineer, a legislator or a community leader. The profession matters less than the fact that education expanded her possibilities.
The true measure of impact is when a beneficiary becomes a multiplier of opportunity for others, and households become empowered.
You were the first woman to run for the Okigwe State Constituency and the first female BOT chair of the Action Alliance Party. What did achieving these firsts cost you, and were they worth it?
Being the first often means walking without a map. It comes with scrutiny, resistance, and isolation.
The cost was comfort, and the reward was opening doors. Learning whilst in service and seeing the need for women’s agency in an ever-evolving, dynamically male-dominated space. Every barrier broken creates a pathway for another woman. So yes, it was worth it.
Throughout the journey, I wrote Politics and Power, which has since become a best-selling masterpiece that demystifies the odds against women in politics. History rarely remembers those who waited for permission; it remembers those who prepared for responsibility and expanded possibility.
Nigerian politics is not an easy place for women. What should women who want to join that field know before they get involved?
They should know that politics is not a spectator sport. It requires resilience, preparation, relationships, and strategy.
Women must enter politics understanding that competence alone is not enough. They need networks, visibility, resources, and persistence. Most importantly, they must remember that they belong there. Representation is not a favour; it is a democratic right.
Many women feel their voice is too small to make a difference in policy areas. What would you say to that woman directly?
I would tell her this: policies are not changed by voices that are large; they are changed by voices that are consistent.
Every major movement began with someone who was initially ignored. Speak. Write. Organize. Participate. The size of your voice matters less than your willingness to use it.
What is the one thing you wish African women would stop saying sorry for?
I wish African women would stop apologizing for ambition.
Too many women shrink themselves to make others comfortable. Yet no society progresses when half its talent is taught to minimize itself. Your ambition is not arrogance. It is your responsibility to your potential.
You have built your life around helping other women be seen. Who helped you get noticed, and how has that shaped how you support others?
I have been fortunate to encounter mentors, leaders, and ordinary people who saw possibilities in me before I fully saw them in myself. Their belief taught me an important lesson: visibility is a gift that must be shared. That is why I intentionally create platforms, opportunities, and networks for women. Someone opened a door for me; I consider it my duty to hold that door open for others.
”Leadership is not measured by how
many people stand behind you, but by how many people rise because you stood for them. ”*