I was genuinely surprised and humbled by this article, written about me without my knowledge by someone who has been observing what we have been doing.
@daily_trust
Reading it reminded me of something I strongly believe: whatever we achieve individually is ultimately fleeting. The more meaningful legacy is not the awards, titles, or recognition, but the people we help grow, mentor, and empower to eventually stand on their own, and hopefully even surpass us.
I would not be where I am today without family, mentors, institutions, colleagues, friends, and opportunities that invested in me long before the world knew my name. Because of that, I have always felt a deep responsibility to extend similar opportunities to others.
That philosophy is deeply embedded within
@BioRTCNig.
Our vision has never been simply to build laboratories or acquire equipment. It is to build people. To create an environment where motivated young individuals, regardless of background, ethnicity, religion, or geography, can access mentorship, training, global exposure, and the confidence to believe that they too can contribute meaningfully to science and society.
If, years from now, BioRTC becomes known not only for research outputs, but for producing generations of ethical, competent, and globally competitive African scientists, then I would consider that one of our greatest achievements.
There is still a great deal of work ahead, but I remain sincerely grateful to everyone who continues to believe in and support this journey.