Chantal Biya
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Chantal Biya (b. 1971) is the First Lady of Cameroon. She was born in Dimako, East Province, to French expatriate Georges Vigouroux and Miss Doumé pageant winner Rosette Ndongo Mengolo. Chantal Biya spent her adolescence in Yaoundé.[1]
She married President Paul Biya on 23 April 1994, after his first wife, Jeanne-Irène Biya, died in 1992. Chantal Biya has established several charitable organisations. Among them are African Synergy, which pursues various HIV/AIDS initiatives, and the Chantal Biya Foundation (French Fondation Chantal Biya). She hosted the original First Ladies Summit in Yaoundé during the 1996 Organisation of African Unity summit.[2] Her Jeunesse Active pour Chantal Biya is an organ of her husband's Cameroon People's Democratic Movement.[3]
Among Cameroonian women, Biya is famous for her hairstyles. Her signature style is called the banane, and is used for formal occasions.[4] Biya has popularised other styles; collectively, they are known as the Chantal Biya.[5]
Grand Prix Chantal Biya is a professional road bicycle racing event on the UCI Africa Tour.
Chantal's mother, Rosette Marie Mboutchouang, was elected mayor of Bangou following the July 2007 municipal elections.[6]
[edit] Notes
[edit] References
- Dorall, Charyl, ed. (2004). Commonwealth Ministers Reference Book 2003. Commonwealth Secretariat.
- F., M. (2 August 2007). "Bangou - La mère de Chantal Biya élue maire". Le Quotidien Mutations. Accessed 7 May 2008.
- Ibrahim, Jibrin (October 2003). "Democratic Transition in Anglophone West Africa". Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa.
- Morikang, Tche Irene (6 May 2008). "Revisiting the Extraordinary Life of Chantal Biya", Cameroon Tribune. Accessed 7 May 2008.
- Ngwane, Mwalimu George (no date). "Cameroon's Democratic Process: Vision 2020". gngwane.com.
- Nyamnjoh, Francis B., Durham, Deborah, and Fokwang, Jude D (December 2002). "The Domestication of Hair and Modernised Consciousness in Cameroon: A Critique in the Context of Globalisation". Identity Culture and Politics, Vol. 3., Number 2, pp. 98–124.
- "Paul Biya's Biography". Republic of Cameroon 2004 Presidential Elections website. Accessed 27 October 2006.