What is
Cycle Aid for Africa?
Cycle Aid for Africa is a hugely successful Education Africa project that distributes bicycles to under-resourced schoolchildren who have to travel enormous distances to attend school every day.
The project was launched on 20 March 1997 by then Deputy-President of South Africa, Thabo Mbeki.
Speaking at the launch, he described Cycle Aid for Africa as a project that represents a “practical way in which we seek to empower communities in their quest for a better education”.
Background to the project
The project was first started with the assistance of the Osaka Prefectural Government in Japan, the University of Pretoria, NOCSA (National Olympic Committee of South
Africa) and the Japanese Embassy. The Osaka Prefectural Government assisted with an initial donation to Education Africa of thousands of bicycles that had been abandoned and discarded in the Osaka Prefectural cities. The Japanese Embassy funded the transportation of the bicycles to Education Africa in South Africa for distribution. Education Africa has moved forward with Cycle Aid for Africa, taking it to a new level. We now use locally manufactured mountain bikes which are more hardy and durable, allowing us to deliver far better bicycles to schoolchildren in need.
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