Ulanda Mtamba

Ulanda Mtamba is a Malawian campaigner for education who is against child marriage. She became a President of Rotary International in Limbe and one of the BBC's 100 women in 2023. She is the country director of Advancing Girls Education in Africa (AGE Africa). 10% of girls in Malawi are married by the age of fifteen.

Life
Mtamba's hometown is Lilongwe in Malawi. In her community, girls frequently leave education for marriage. She is a campaigner for education, and she is against child marriage.

Mtamba has worked to improve the lives of people living with AIDS since 2003. In 2018 she was a fellow of the New York-based AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition. In 2019 she joined Rotary International.

She is the country director of Advancing Girls Education in Africa (AGE Africa). AGE Africa is an American non-profit started in 2005 by Xanthe Scharff to fund African girls' education.

Mtamba became the President of Limbe's Rotary International club in 2023. She is the first woman to serve in that role in Limbe. Her club announced the completion of three years work to manage the watershed in the Machinga District. Her club had led the work and it will improve the lives of 2,500 people.

She became one of the thirteen African women named as part of the BBC's 100 Women in 2023. Three other of the BBC 100 women visited her area as they are also concerned about the education of girls in Malawi. Michelle Obama, Melinda French Gates, and Amal Clooney visited a secondary school in Malawi in November 2023. Obama said that she had heard of the work done in supporting girls education and that her foundation funded AGE Africa since 2018. Accounts of the visit included quotes from all four of the BBC 100 women. Mtamba as the country director for AGE Africa noted that the visit of the other three showed the importance of their work. Ulanda is among the 100 Inspiring Women 2024 Season II by the Wealth Woman Magazine in Malawi. She speaks out about child marriage noting that most girls are married before they are eighteen and ten per cent of girls marry before the age of fifteen.