Aisha Maina Flew 120 Nigerians to St. Kitts in a Bold Push for Afri-Caribbean Collaboration

Published on July 07, 2025 at 06:00 PM

Aisha Maina Flew 120 Nigerians to St. Kitts in a Bold Push for Afri-Caribbean Collaboration 6

A Bridge, Not a Moment
In June this year, Aisha personally funded and led a 120-person Nigerian delegation to St. Kitts and Nevis. It wasn’t your typical government junket, but a bold, privately financed trip that brought together creatives, entrepreneurs, policymakers, cultural leaders, and young people. All crossed the Atlantic with a shared goal to deepen ties between Africa and the Caribbean.

Their mission was to build connections through real dialogue, cultural exchange, and tangible partnerships. The delegation, serviced by Air Peace, was the visible outcome of something Aisha had been building for years, a foundation of trust, alignment, and a new global African identity. But this story did not begin at the boarding gate.

Just weeks earlier, she had convened the Aquarian Consult Afri-Caribbean Investment Summit in Abuja, bringing together Caribbean leaders, including Prime Minister Terrance Drew of St. Kitts and Nevis, African policymakers, and powerhouse women such as former Mauritian President Ameenah Gurib-Fakim. For many Caribbean leaders, it was their first time in Nigeria.

The message was clear. Africa is no longer waiting for the world. It is building its own alliances, and women like Aisha are leading the way.

The Caribbean is not a distant cousin of Africa. It is part of our story, and part of our future, Aisha said. What we are building is a bridge grounded in trust, shared culture, and a commitment to prosperity.

Who Is Aisha Maina?
On paper, she is a heavy hitter. CEO of Aquarian Consult, founder of Aquarian Oil and Gas, and a woman with credentials from Oxford, Harvard, Cambridge, Cornell, and LSE. She sits on boards, advises governments, and has worked across energy, education, and enterprise.

But in conversation, what stands out is not her résumé. It is her conviction. There is a warmth in her voice, a precision in her thinking, and a kind of effortless grace that draws people in.
Her approach to leadership is not about visibility. It is about building something that lasts.

More Than Symbolism. This Is Soft Power in Action.
At a time when African soft power often shows up as celebrity endorsements and summit photo ops, Aisha’s work stands apart. It is grounded in something deeper and designed to endure. From policy exchange to cultural showcases, from youth inclusion to intra-African investment, she is laying the foundation for a bridge others can walk across for generations.

And it is working.
Just weeks after the June delegation, President Tinubu received a knighthood in Saint Lucia. A symbolic gesture, yes, but one that signalled a growing diplomatic and cultural alignment. It did not happen by coincidence. A subtle but intentional diplomacy at work, beyond boardrooms, shaping culture, commerce, and connection.

The Woman Behind the Work
So, who is Aisha Maina when she is not chairing summits or mentoring young entrepreneurs? She is someone who believes in collaboration over competition, in African solutions for African futures, and in closing the gap between business and diplomacy. She is intentional about who she brings into the room, how she frames opportunity, and why representation must be meaningful.

What’s Next?
Aisha is not slowing down. The Afri-Caribbean platform she has built is entering a new phase, one focused on depth, delivery, and sustainability. Her next steps are designed to transform this movement into lasting infrastructure.

She is working on immersive cultural and creative exchanges that go beyond celebration and lead to co-creation, distribution, and intellectual property collaboration across borders. Trade partnerships are being structured to link small and medium-sized enterprises from Africa and the Caribbean, particularly in sectors such as fashion, agriculture, beauty, and digital services.

Aisha Maina Flew 120 Nigerians to St. Kitts in a Bold Push for Afri-Caribbean Collaboration 3

Aisha Maina Flew 120 Nigerians to St. Kitts in a Bold Push for Afri-Caribbean Collaboration 2


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