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Aisha Babangida and Service Beyond Status
Erelu Aisha Babangida inherited a famous name but chose to build something deeper. As the eldest daughter of former Military President Ibrahim Babangida and the late First Lady Maryam Babangida, she could have rested on legacy. Instead, she has spent over two decades turning privilege into purpose.
Erelu Aisha’s work began in 2002 with the Tasnim Foundation, providing academic scholarships to young girls in underserved communities and building rural schools. She then stepped up as Chairperson of the Better Life Program for the African Rural Woman(BLPRW), modernising her mother’s iconic initiative into a professional NGO that now manages over 250 health, educational and agricultural projects across the continent.
But Aisha understood that empowerment requires more than charity. It requires access to capital. In April 2016, she founded Egwafin Microfinance Bank, a dedicated financial institution designed to extend microloans and credit to female traders and small-scale farmers who have no collateral for traditional banking. The bank has opened doors that banks had kept shut.
In 2018, she launched the Women Enterprise Alliance, a platform that has grown to support over 4,700 businesses across all 36 Nigerian states through capital investment, digital marketing training, and mentorship. Her efforts earned her the Crans Montana Forum Gold Medal in Brussels in 2019, an international honour recognising her commitment to the economic advancement of African women.
In December 2024, she spearheaded a N5 million educational grant through BLPARW, delivering critical funding and learning materials directly to orphans and vulnerable children in Abuja.
Behind the titles and awards is a woman described by those close to her as humble, empathetic, and generous. She also carries a quiet personal responsibility: following her mother’s passing, she has taken up the mantle of caring for her father in Minna, representing him at major national functions.
Erelu Aisha has proven that true influence is not measured by wealth or status alone. It is measured by the lives touched, the businesses funded, the children educated, and the hope restored.







