Eye Care Leaders Awarded at World Economic Forum
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 6 May 2010: Two visionary eye care leaders from
Australia and South Africa, Professor Brien Holden and Professor Kovin Naidoo, have
been jointly awarded the Schwab Social Entrepreneur Award for Africa 2010, at the
regional World Economic Forum in Tanzania yesterday.
Through their work with the International Centre for Eyecare Education (ICEE), the
two have been key figures in efforts to tackle avoidable blindness and vision
impairment on the African continent.
The award was presented by Professor and Mrs Schwab during the Opening Plenary
of the World Economic Forum on Africa in front of the continent's business and
government leaders.
The Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship acknowledges outstanding
leaders or visionaries who pursue poverty alleviation with entrepreneurial zeal and
whose efforts are characterised by innovation, sustainability, reach and social
impact. It also recognises their efforts in building strong and sustainable
organisations, which are either set up as not-for-profit or for-profit companies.
Winners are invited to attend regional World Economic Forums.
Professor Holden paid special tribute to the efforts of ICEE and Professor Naidoo. "To
have been considered to have done something useful for the people of Africa is a
great honour, one that is rightly deserved by the people from ICEE (and from
optometry around the world who support them), who make a difference to vision
care, blindness prevention and new opportunities for so many," he said. "I am very
grateful to Kovin Naidoo for including me as his partner in the nomination."
"To be awarded Social Entrepreneur for Africa for 2010, encourages every person
working in vision care and blindness prevention," Professor Holden added. "For the
Schwab Foundation and the World Economic Forum to recognise the importance of
vision in this way is extraordinarily helpful. It will encourage all of us in eye care and
NGOs working to prevent blindness to continue to try to create sustainable solutions
that have a real effect on people's lives."
Professor Naidoo said he was humbled to receive the award. "It is an honour for our
work to be recognised in this way," he said. "We hope this award helps alert other
development sectors to eye care initiatives and stimulates even greater social
entrepreneurship efforts in eye care," he added.
Professor Naidoo said the award will help contextualise the role of blindness
prevention and eye care programmes in the broader development agenda. "It is
crucial that we acknowledge the impact that blindness and vision impairment has on
people’s lives, its role in perpetuating poverty and the broad affect it has on
development efforts", he said.
Professor Holden added, "The award means that the 100 or so people of ICEE - and
the hundreds in other great eye care INGDOs - that work extremely hard to create
the eye care personnel needed, the infrastructure, affordable treatment and quality
outcomes, will be boosted by the recognition that their efforts are bearing fruit."
"On a personal level, it is of immense pride that Kovin Naidoo is getting the
recognition that he does not seek but richly deserves, not of course for the tasks that
have been completed, but that the challenge is being met effectively."
By joining the Schwab Foundation community and World Economic Forum network,
Professors Holden and Naidoo will have further opportunities to extend the work of
ICEE in Africa and globally.
ICEE was established by Professor Holden and colleagues in 1998 to address the Return
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