Cameroon: the women of Bloom’L announce the creation of a podcast for political education

Cameroon: the women of Bloom'L announce the creation of a podcast for political education
(JDC)
© (JDC)

The Bloom’L association brought together the laureates of its Bloom’Nummérique and Bloom’ Leaders Challenge programs on June 6, 2026, in Yaoundé, to create networking, mutual aid, and real female empowerment by having the two groups work together.

The first fruit of the alliance between the two cohorts is the project for a podcast dedicated to the political education of women and young girls. The launch is scheduled for July 2026. The online project will be optimized by the laureates of Bloom’ numérique. The Bloom’ leaders challenge program trains women in societal, political, and associative leadership. The first cohort completed its curriculum in September and is currently carrying out two projects (a podcast and an environmental project). Bloom numérique is a 22-week training where 15 women learn digital tools, from classic office automation (Word, Excel) to new technologies such as generative artificial intelligence (AI) and large language models (LLM).

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This program aims to develop technological skills to create digital entrepreneurs capable of generating income. The president of the Bloom’L association, Antoinette Nyoung, explains that the integration of AI is not intended to replace humans but to shape “augmented women” capable of generating income by digitizing businesses and associations.

For a long time, politics was scary. “Personally, I was never interested in politics, I was apolitical,” confides Monique Chantal Ngo Lissouck, social entrepreneur and laureate of the Bloom Leader Challenge. “But this training allowed me to understand the reality of what it is. The nation is all of us: men and women.”

An opinion shared by Gaëlle Virginia Tsague, senior youth and animation advisor, who states that: “the city cannot be managed without women. They can no longer be spectators of decisions made without them.”

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“My expectations are to acquire as much knowledge as possible to create platforms, and then transmit that to young girls in schools so that they are capable, from secondary school, of generating income,” confides Carole Ntsama, agripreneur in the health sector and participant in the digital component.

Read also: https://fr.journalducameroun.com/yaounde-la-maison-imbokodo-un-nouvel-espace-dedie-a-lepanouissement-des-femmes/

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