Amina Moghe Hersi
Amina Hersi Moghe | |
---|---|
Born |
Bungoma, Kenya | 27 September 1964
Residence | Kampala, Uganda |
Nationality | Kenyan |
Occupation | Entrepreneur |
Known for |
Oasis Shopping Mall Laburnam Courts Apartments Atiak Sugar Factory |
Amina Hersi Moghe (Somali: Aamina Xirsi Mooge , Arabic: أمينة موجي هرسي) (b. 1964) is a Kenyan entrepreneur. She has launched several multimillion-dollar projects in Kampala, Uganda. Her investments include Oasis Shopping Mall in Kampala's central business district and the Laburnam Courts Apartments, on Nakasero Hill adjacent to State House Kampala. She in the process of launching the first sugar factory in Northern Uganda. Atiak sugar factory will not only bring revenue and development for the region but is championed as the first large scale industrial project for Northern Uganda. She is also one of the city's largest distributors of cement and other hardware materials. With a myriad of successful business throughout Uganda she is a beacon of hope and a motivating role model for the African girl child. [1]
Biography
Amina was born in Bungoma in the east of Kenya, where her mother, Sarah Hersi Ali, is a prominent businesswoman. Adam Hersi Ali, her uncle, who was another inspirational pillar in Amina's life, served as a Financial Secretary of Treasury in the Kenya's Ministry of Finance in the late 1980s. As a young girl, Moghe and her sister regularly joined their family in the cross border trade between Kenya and Uganda.The two girls were sent to accounting school by their mother, where they built on their entrepreneurial skills. Having a strong entrepreneurial mother led her to be business savvy not afraid of make big business risk. Her biggest risk was closing her successful hardware store in Bungoma Kenya and venturing in a start up business in Uganda after the stabilisation of the country in 1996. With no foundation set for her she used the skills she was taught to set up a hardware store in the bustling city of Kampala Uganda. This stride into the unknown was the first step of the enterprising woman she is today. [2]
Career
"It was a pleasant surprise and I'm grateful for the recognition. The award has really inspired me to do more in the coming years," – Amina Moghe Hersi. |
Moghe quickly adapted to her new environment and acted as a convenient link on the ground for her family's commercial trade. She began expanding the family business and entered the real estate sector. Moghe would eventually become one of the wealthiest people in Uganda and come to own the Oasis Centre, a multimillion-dollar shopping mall complex and grand scale luxurious apartment Laburnam Courts that are both situated in the center of the capital. She also runs one of the largest distributors of cement and other hardware materials in the country. In 2008, Amina received the Woman Investor of the year Award for her large-scale projects that are changing Kampala's skyline.[3][4]
Recent developments
In 2016, Amina Hersi Moghe via her investment company, Horyal Investment Holding Company Limited began construction of Atiak Sugar Factory, in Atiak, Amuru District, Northern Uganda. The US$120 million project is expected to be ready in 2016, with commercial production expected in 2017.[5][6] This factory will be the first large scale industrial project in Northern Uganda. With the biggest benefactors being women who are working in conjunction with Amina in the factories development. Primarily as sugar cane out growers and main distributors of the final product once production begins. Over 6000 women are already directly and indirectly profiting from the factory even before its commencement.
See also
References
- ↑ Wanja, Beatrice (8 October 2009). "Uganda: Scaling Business Heights With Passion, Self Drive". Daily Monitor via AllAfrica.com. Kampala. Retrieved 15 October 2014.
- ↑ Mukiibi Sserunjogi, Eriasa (11 November 2013). "Amina Omusementi: The Somali Woman Building An Empire In Kampala". Daily Monitor. Kampala. Retrieved 15 November 2014.
- ↑ Das, Devapriyo (9 September 2009). "Devastated At Home, Somali Businesses Thrive In Uganda". The Observer (Uganda). Retrieved 15 October 2014.
- ↑ Hawdian, . (5 Aug 2013). "Powerful Somali Women". EthiopiaNewsForum.Com. Retrieved 15 October 2014.
- ↑ Administrator (17 February 2016). "120 Million Dollar Factory Established In Atiak". Gulu: Adwarping.co.ug. Retrieved 22 April 2016.
- ↑ Ocungi, Julius (23 March 2016). "Professor Latigo faults Amuru leaders on investments". Daily Monitor. Kampala. Retrieved 22 April 2016.