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Finalists announced for 2023 Commonwealth Youth Awards

Layne Robinson, Head of Social Policy Development at The Commonwealth Secretariat
Layne Robinson, Head of Social Policy Development at The Commonwealth Secretariat

Twenty young people who have made outstanding contributions in various areas will vie for the Commonwealth Youth Awards for Excellence in Development Work.

The regional finalists were selected from a group of 50 shortlisted young leaders identified as changemakers who are actively making progress towards achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.

The Commonwealth Youth Awards will be presented in person this year at St James’s Palace in London, where the event will be attended by His Royal Highness, The Duke of Edinburgh. The Duke has long championed youth causes and promoted development opportunities for young people.

The Commonwealth Secretariat’s Head of Social Policy Development, Layne Robinson, said:

“These awards are a source of pride for us at the Secretariat, and particular the Secretary-General, as we have wholeheartedly committed to empowering and amplifying young people. These 20 regional finalists have sacrificed much and it is with great pleasure that we have an opportunity to reward them.

I also want to thank the Duke of Edinburgh for agreeing to attend the awards and the Queen’s Commonwealth Trust for their continued partnership.”

The Youth Awards will be one of the main side events of the Commonwealth Youth Ministers Meeting (CYMM), which takes place from 11-15 September 2023. Ministers and senior officials from across 56 nations will gather at Marlborough House, the Commonwealth headquarters, to deliberate on proposals, share best practices and decide on future plans to support young people across the Commonwealth.

It will be the tenth time they will be convening, and this meeting will be held under the theme: ‘Aim Higher: Delivering More for Young People in the Commonwealth.’

While there will be celebrations of the 50th anniversary of the Commonwealth Youth Programme, the meeting will be focused on charting the way forward with the input of young people, experts, and youth workers in collaboration with the ministers, senior officials and policymakers who will be gathered for CYMM.

On Thursday, 14th September, those gathered for the Commonwealth Youth Ministers Meeting will celebrate the achievements of the Youth Awards finalists. The celebrations will also unveil the much-anticipated Commonwealth Young Person of the Year.

Each of the 20 finalists will receive a trophy, a certificate and £1,000 as their prize. The top finalist from each region will be recognised as the regional winner and will receive £3,000.

One of the five regional winners will then become the Commonwealth Young Person of the Year 2023 and be awarded £5,000.

In continuation of the Commonwealth Secretariat’s partnership with the Queen’s Commonwealth Trust (QCT), an additional prize of £20,000 in funding will also be presented to one project at the award ceremony, to be delivered over the course of two years. The winner will be enrolled into QCT’s Youth Ventures Programme and given access to coaching and development opportunities.

The 2023 finalists, listed in alphabetical order and by region, are:

Africa

• Mawuse Christina Gyisun (Ghana)

• Ghislain Irakoze (Rwanda)

• Deliwe Makata (Malawi)

• Emmanuel Tlemu (Republic of Tanzania)

Asia

• Soumya Dabriwal (India)

• Ahmed Imtiaz Jami (Bangladesh)

• Mathura Kannan (Malaysia)

• Shaiwana Nisar (Pakistan)

Caribbean

• Ché Greenidge (Barbados)

• Maya Kirti Nanan (Trinidad and Tobago)

• Shergaun Roserie (Saint Lucia)

• Akola Thompson (Guyana)

Europe and Canada

• Yi Fei Chen (Canada)

• Rebecca Daniel (United Kingdom)

• Leejoo Hwang (Canada)

• Meihuan Yu (Canada)

Pacific

• Raeed Ali (Fiji)

• Robea Daniel (Vanuatu)

• Nathaniel Diong (Australia)

• Desmond Goru (Papua New Guinea)

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