Washington Business Winter 2018 | Washington Business | Page 43

business backgrounder | industry And the AWB luncheon was just one of the stops on the calendar during a busy season for the leaders of Alaffia, a company that’s experiencing rapid growth and gaining visibility, both in the U.S. and in Togo. The same day, Alaffia leaders hosted David Gilmour, the U.S. ambassador to Togo, for a tour and meeting with local and state elected officials, as well as U.S. Rep. Denny Heck, at the company’s manufacturing facility. Despite stereotypes of villagers living in grass huts, Africa is rapidly urbanizing, Gilmour told The Olympian newspaper. Togo, he said, wants to become a business hub akin to Dubai or Singapore, and Alaffia has blazed a trail in part of Africa. Later in the day, the ambassador plus the four members of the Alaffia Empowerment Council and Alaffia co-founders Olowo-n’djo Tchala and Prairie Rose Hyde sat in the wings at the state Senate chambers to witness passage of a resolution recognizing Alaffia’s work to improve the standard of living in Togo and calling for increased trade opportunities between the U.S. and Togo. That evening, the group spoke at a symposium hosted by Saint Martin’s University on the topic of using private enterprise to alleviate poverty and advance gender equality. And in August, Tchala and Hyde traveled to Lome, Togo to participate in the 2017 African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) conference. AGOA is a U.S. trade act enacted in 2000 that significantly expanded U.S. market access for qualifying sub-Saharan African countries. To qualify and remain eligible, a country must be working to improve its rule of law, human rights and respect for core labor standards. Each year, the countries participating in AGOA meet for a summit. The theme for this year’s conference was “The United States and Africa: Partnering for Prosperity through Trade.” a love story There are few people better qualified to speak on the issue than Tchala and Hyde. The couple met in 1996 when Hyde, a Washington native and Peace Corps volunteer, ended up in Tchala’s home village of Kaboli, Togo. They fell in love, married, and moved to the United States determined to find a way to alleviate poverty and improve the standard of living in West Africa. Hyde entered a graduate program studying international agriculture and ethnobotany, the scientific study of the relationship between people and plants, and Tchala — who dropped out of school in sixth grade for financial reasons winter 2018 43