 Africa Agility has partnered Impact Legos at the Eco-Innovation Center to bridge the technology gap and ensure the inclusion of more women in technology by training 10,000 girls for the next five years. At the grand finale of the third edition of Girls in Tech Bootcamp, the participant featured an inverse project on how technology can help solve problems and make life easy. Plus, TV Africa's Ngozika HSE has more in this report. Women across various career fields often feel marginalized. Despite their involvement in active participation, it cannot be said that women enjoy all the opportunities that are bound in various fields. However, Girls in Tech is a program designed to develop young girls with agility, artificial intelligence, web development and data science. Statistically, there is a massive gap between women and men in technology, while women make up 25%. 75% are men. As a result of this, Eco-Innovation Center has partnered with Africa Agility and Impact Legos is changing the narrative. The CEO Agility Health, Sally Elata, shares her story as a young girl with big dreams to encourage the girls at the bootcamp. I choose to show up as a very confident expert, somebody who's got a big dream, somebody who's always going to wear a big smile, and I found that that has never stopped me. So, you know, did I ever feel any of that? It might have happened around me, but I will tell you that I don't see it. I choose not to feel it. Within three weeks of interns learning, these young tech girls have been able to work in teams on different projects to solve real life problems. Team energy, using the agile methodology and scope framework has come up with a very viable solution. And we call it flash logistics. Bookworm is an AI-based web platform that allows users from anywhere around the world to read any type of book they want, in any language they want. The founder of Africa Agility, Anu Gopoud, spoke on what the future holds for this foundation. According to her, girls do belong to the technology industry. The way we are developing these girls is not actually to be looking for jobs. We want to make them tech premium, entrepreneur, because they are talented and they have dreams, they have visions. There are so many social economy problems that they can come up with and create a digital solution. So we are going to empower some of these girls with the entrepreneurship skills. The girls are excited about the initiative as they share on how the training has impacted on them. I'm ready, you know, I'm ready. And I think it has built my confidence to accomplish any task. I did not come from a background of tech. So honestly being open to the possibility of combining it with whatever it is I am doing and being able to be innovative and everything is just, is beautiful. I'm really afraid, I'm amazed at my own growth and the growth of others here. We all came in as like newbies with technically nothing to write home about. But now we're living as, you know, techies. Women are disproportionate in tech globally. In Nigeria, less than one percent of women are part of the total tech ecosystem. It is hope that with projects like this, the narrative will indeed change. For Plus TV Africa, Ngozika, O'aii Chesn.