Pinky Kekana: Biography of Pinky Kekana, Age, Profile & Contact Details,<\/em><\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n
Pinky Kekana is the Honorable Deputy Minister of Communications and Technologies\u00a0<\/span>of the Republic of South Africa. She was appointed as Deputy Minister of Communications on 27 February 2018.<\/span><\/p>\n
Ms Pinky Kekana was born in Bela-Bela. Bela-Bela is a town in the Limpopo Province of South Africa.<\/p>\n
Kekana has completed a Bachelor of Arts Degree (specializing in Education and teaching).<\/p>\n
Kekana\u2019s experience as a secondary school teacher fuelled her passion for education and South African\u2019s young people. She is committed to improving opportunities for young South African\u2019s, from all walks of life.<\/p>\n
Kekana was elected to the Provincial legislature in 1999 and was re-elected in 2009. She has served as the Executive Mayor of Waterberg District and a MEC for Roads and Transport as well as a MEC for Economic Development, Environment and Tourism.<\/p>\n
21 May 2014 on she was elected to be a member of National Assembly. As a member of parliament, Ms Kekana served on the following committees: Standing Committee on Finance (National Assembly Committees), and, Ad Hoc Committee on the Filling of Vacancies in the Commission for Gender Equality<\/p>\n
In 2015, she was elected in African National congresswomen\u2019s League National Executive Committee and was subsequently deployed to be the Secretary-General of the Pan African Women Organisation (\u201cPAWO\u201d).<\/p>\n
In her capacity as Secretary-General of PAWO, Kekana is committed to ensuring that all African women, particularly girl children are empowered.<\/p>\n
She currently serves as the Deputy Minister of Communications and as someone from a rural town, Kekana understands and recognizes the vital importance of bridging the Digital divide between people living, working and travelling in regional and remote parts of the country and those in metropolitan cities.<\/p>\n
Our society is rapidly moving towards using cutting edge technology and more people are getting access to the internet year-on-year.<\/p>\n
Kekana believes that rural South Africans should have access to 21st-century communications to run their businesses, complete their studies and connect with family and friends.<\/p>\n
EMAIL<\/p>\n