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Mpule Kwelagobe

Mpule Kwelagobe
Beauty pageant titleholder
Mpule Kwelagobe.jpg
Mpule Kwelagobe in 2013 discussing her MPULE Institute for Endogenous Development addressing HIV/AIDS, food security and the feminization of poverty in Africa.
Born Mpule Keneilwe Kwelagobe
(1979-11-14) November 14, 1979 (age 37)
Gaborone, Botswana
Height 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Hair color Black
Eye color Brown
Title(s) Miss Botswana 1997
Miss Universe Botswana 1999
Miss Universe 1999
Major
competition(s)
Miss Botswana 1997
(Winner)
Miss World 1997
(Unplaced)
Miss Universe Botswana 1999
(Winner)
Miss Universe 1999
(Winner)

Mpule Keneilwe Kwelagobe (born November 14, 1979) is a Botswana politician, businesswoman, model, and beauty pageant title holder, who was crowned Miss Universe 1999 in Trinidad & Tobago. She was the third African woman to win an international beauty pageant title. Since being crowned Miss Universe 1999, Kwelagobe has been recognized and honored as a human health rights activist, especially for her fight against HIV/AIDS and advocacy for youth and women to have greater access to sexual reproductive education and services.

Kwelagobe participated in the Miss World pageant (in 1997) but did not place. She was the first Miss Universe Botswana and the first Miss Botswana to participate in the Miss Universe pageant.

Following her reign as Miss Universe, Kwelagobe became a spokesmodel for Clairol. The two page ads first appeared in magazines in the U.S. while Kwelagobe was Miss Universe.

In 2000, Kwelagobe was appointed as a Goodwill Ambassador by the United Nations, focusing on youth and HIV/AIDS. Among others, she has addressed the United States Congress (the United States House of Representatives Committee on Banking and Financial Services). Kwelagobe testified on the socioeconomic impact of AIDS in Africa and proposed a bill to set up a World Bank AIDS prevention trust fund. Kwelagobe is now married to a New York-based businessman, Sean Johnson who works at Columbia University. She currently has one child, also named Sean.

In 2015, she signed an open letter which the ONE Campaign had been collecting signatures for; the letter was addressed to Angela Merkel and Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, urging them to focus on women as they serve as the head of the G7 in Germany and the AU in South Africa respectively, which will start to set the priorities in development funding before a main UN summit in September 2015 that will establish new development goals for the generation.

Kwelagobe was honored with the Jonathan Mann Health Human Rights Award by the International Association of Physicians in AIDS Care (IAPAC). She was honored alongside the principal administrator of the European Commission HIV programme, Lieve Fransen, and former American President Bill Clinton. In 2003, she was selected as a Global Leader for Tomorrow (GLT) by the World Economic Forum, joining nearly 500 individuals from business, politics, public interest groups, the media, and the arts and the sciences, including Bill Gates, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, Michael Dell and Bono, who have been selected since the programme’s inception in 1993.


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