ABOUT THE MILLENNIUM FELLOWSHIP - CLASS OF 2025
United Nations Academic Impact and MCN are proud to partner on the Millennium Fellowship. This year, 60,000+ young leaders applied to join the Class of 2025 on 7,000+ campuses across 170 nations. 290+ campuses worldwide (less than 5%) were selected to host the 4,500+ Millennium Fellows.

UNITED NATIONS ACADEMIC IMPACT AND MCN PROUDLY PRESENT EYINJUOLUWA OLUWATUNMISE ALABI, A MILLENNIUM FELLOW FOR THE CLASS OF 2025.
Afe Babalola University Ado | Ado-Ekiti, Nigeria | Advancing SDG 4, SDG 5 & UNAI 3

" I'm extremely enthusiastic to be a part of a global movement, an initiative towards our collective greater good. By tackling SDGs specifically Goal 3- Good Health and Well-being, my cohort members and I can make an active effort to improve the quality of life of each individual within our community, and contribute to the bigger picture, making the world a healthier place. "
Millennium Fellowship Project: BrightHer-Lifesavers Initiative
Project Title: BrightHer-LifeSavers Initiative
Project Focus: Empowering women and girls through Health, Literacy, and Human Rights and Empowering Individuals with Life Saving Skills(CPR)
Project Overview
The BrightHer-LifeSavers Initiative aims to promote women’s health and empowerment through:
• Health Education: Menstrual hygiene, adequate nutrition, reproductive care, and maternal and child health.
• Life-Saving Skills: Training participants in Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) and other basic emergency response techniques.
Through these activities, we were able to advance Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 3, 4, and 5 — Good Health and Well-being, Quality Education, and Gender Equality.
About the Millennium Fellow
Alabi Eyinjuoluwa Oluwatunmise is an eighteen year old student of Medicine and Surgery, intercalating in Medical physiology at Afe Babalola University Ado Ekiti. She was born in London,UK and raised by a single mother and her siblings in Ekiti and Ondo state. She is a Christian, an overachiever and a dreamer. In her university she has served in many capacities to improve conditions for her colleagues and partnered with organizations to impact the next generation. She has grown to be glad for any opportunity to be "out of fashion" if it means conceiving she and those around her could be beyond their current state. "If I can't fix it, maybe I can make it better" seems to her like an worthy direction to dream.












