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PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Charity launched by East Midlands entrepreneur helping improve the lives of 50,000 Ugandan girls and women

The Randal Charitable Foundation was launched by entrepreneur Dr Nik Kotecha OBE DL and Mrs Moni Kotecha

Ugandan girls are being helped with their menstrual cycle

A charity launched by an East Midlands entrepreneur has given a “significant” grant to the Ugandan Red Cross to improve the lives of up to 50,000 girls and women in the country.

The Randal Charitable Foundation has partnered with the health organisation to build a factory in the East African nation making reusable sanitary pads.

As well as helping women and girls with their periods, the factory, in the central Mukono district, will provide jobs for more than 200 vulnerable females who will be trained the make and market the pads.

Once fully established it will make 200,000 re-usable pads a year, with around a fifth handed out to vulnerable school girls for free. The rest will be sold at a subsidised price.

The Randal Charitable Foundation was launched by Leicestershire entrepreneur Dr Nik Kotecha OBE DL and Mrs Moni Kotecha to help socially disadvantaged children in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and around the world. Its aim is to save and improve the quality of life of a million people globally.

Dr Kotecha was the founder of Loughborough medicines manufacturer Morningside Pharmaceuticals which has been making and supplying generic medicines for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and overseas markets for three decades.

He sold the £76 million turnover business to Hampshire-based Aspire Pharma last autumn, and has been dedicating more time to his charitable work.

Dr Kotecha, who chairs the charity, said: “This project is so beneficial to the community because without access to high quality sanitary pads and toilets, or washrooms for changing, many girls and women are not able to go far from their homes.