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{{Unreferenced|date=October 2010}}
{{refimprove|date=September 2014}}
The '''First Ladies Summit''' was officially established in 2010, with [[Malaysia]] playing the inaugural host for this bi-annual event. It aims to gather [[First Lady|First Ladies]] around the world to support a global initiative to ensure a safe and sustainable future for the next generation. The theme of the [[Summit (meeting)|summit]] is "A Child Today, A Leader Tomorrow".
The '''First Ladies Summit''' was officially established in 2010, with [[Malaysia]] playing the inaugural host for this biennial event. It aims to gather [[First Lady|First Ladies]] around the world to support a global initiative to ensure a safe and sustainable future for the next generation. The theme of the [[Summit (meeting)|summit]] is "A Child Today, A Leader Tomorrow". Despite relatively lukewarm response, [[UN Secretary-General]] [[Ban Ki-moon]] praised the inaugural First Ladies Summit for its efforts in securing the welfare of the children <ref>[http://www.nst.com.my/nst/articles/15ros/Article/ UN chief praises first ladies initiative], [[New Straits Times]], 31 October 2010.</ref>

==Meetings==
==Meetings==
The meetings have been held in:
The meetings have been held in:
* First Ladies Summit 1: October 11–13, 2010, {{flagicon|MYS}} [[Kuala Lumpur]], [[Malaysia]]
* First Ladies Summit 1: October 11–13, 2010, {{flagicon|MYS}} [[Kuala Lumpur]], [[Malaysia]]


The original plan was to hold the summit every two years, but its future has been thrown into doubt following widespread criticism of its poor turnout. There is speculation that the event was merely an expensive publicity stunt thrown by [[Rosmah Mansor]] to justify her self-styled "First Lady of Malaysia" title — technically such a title cannot exist as Malaysia is a [[constitutional monarchy]], not a [[republic]]. Indeed, as of July 2012, there has been no further talk of hosting another summit.
==External links==
*[http://www.firstladiessummit.org/ Official site]


==Participation==
15 first ladies, six representatives of First Ladies and 21 ministers turned up for the event. List of First Ladies who attended the Inaugural First Ladies Summit are listed as follows. The following list is conjured to be illustrative and not comprehensive.


# [[Teuta Topi]] ([[Republic of Albania]])
# Salomea Neves Aim Gomes ([[Guinea Bissau]])
# Ernestina Naadu Mills ([[Ghana]])
# Meme Tong ([[Kiribati]])
# Lorna Golding ([[Jamaica]])
# [[Keosaychay Sayasone]] ([[Laos]])
# [[Sarojini Jugnauth]] ([[Mauritius]])
# Maria De Luz Guebuza ([[Mozambique]])
# Patience Jonathan ([[Nigeria]])
# Mercedes Lugo De Maidana ([[Paraguay]])
# Natalie Brigitte Nadage Michel ([[Seychelles]])
# Sia Nyama Koroma ([[Sierra Leone]])
# [[Shiranthi Rajapaksa]] ([[Sri Lanka]])
# Thandiwe Banda ([[Zambia]])


== Controversies==
{{Uncategorized|date=October 2010}}
The summit sparked public outcry for its perceived poor attendance. Zuraida Kamaruddin, Member of Parliament for Ampang, criticized the perceived wastage of public funds amounting to 24 million [[ringgit]] which she claimed could be put to better use. In addition, [[Rosmah Mansor]]'s title as First Lady of Malaysia drew ire from certain public quarters, for such a status is not official in [[Malaysia]].

==References==
{{Reflist|2}}

==External links==
*[http://www.firstladiessummit.org/ firstladiessummit.org - A global initiative for children's education] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100923041714/http://www.firstladiessummit.org/ |date=2010-09-23 }}


[[Category:ASEAN meetings]]
[[ms:Sidang Kemuncak Wanita-Wanita Pertama]]
[[Category:Organizations associated with ASEAN]]
[[zh:第一夫人峰会]]
[[Category:21st-century diplomatic conferences]]
[[Category:Biennial events]]
[[Category:Recurring events established in 2010]]

Latest revision as of 04:10, 3 February 2024

The First Ladies Summit was officially established in 2010, with Malaysia playing the inaugural host for this biennial event. It aims to gather First Ladies around the world to support a global initiative to ensure a safe and sustainable future for the next generation. The theme of the summit is "A Child Today, A Leader Tomorrow". Despite relatively lukewarm response, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon praised the inaugural First Ladies Summit for its efforts in securing the welfare of the children [1]

Meetings

[edit]

The meetings have been held in:

The original plan was to hold the summit every two years, but its future has been thrown into doubt following widespread criticism of its poor turnout. There is speculation that the event was merely an expensive publicity stunt thrown by Rosmah Mansor to justify her self-styled "First Lady of Malaysia" title — technically such a title cannot exist as Malaysia is a constitutional monarchy, not a republic. Indeed, as of July 2012, there has been no further talk of hosting another summit.

Participation

[edit]

15 first ladies, six representatives of First Ladies and 21 ministers turned up for the event. List of First Ladies who attended the Inaugural First Ladies Summit are listed as follows. The following list is conjured to be illustrative and not comprehensive.

  1. Teuta Topi (Republic of Albania)
  2. Salomea Neves Aim Gomes (Guinea Bissau)
  3. Ernestina Naadu Mills (Ghana)
  4. Meme Tong (Kiribati)
  5. Lorna Golding (Jamaica)
  6. Keosaychay Sayasone (Laos)
  7. Sarojini Jugnauth (Mauritius)
  8. Maria De Luz Guebuza (Mozambique)
  9. Patience Jonathan (Nigeria)
  10. Mercedes Lugo De Maidana (Paraguay)
  11. Natalie Brigitte Nadage Michel (Seychelles)
  12. Sia Nyama Koroma (Sierra Leone)
  13. Shiranthi Rajapaksa (Sri Lanka)
  14. Thandiwe Banda (Zambia)

Controversies

[edit]

The summit sparked public outcry for its perceived poor attendance. Zuraida Kamaruddin, Member of Parliament for Ampang, criticized the perceived wastage of public funds amounting to 24 million ringgit which she claimed could be put to better use. In addition, Rosmah Mansor's title as First Lady of Malaysia drew ire from certain public quarters, for such a status is not official in Malaysia.

References

[edit]
[edit]