In a country with more than 200 million people who don't have access to toilets, Sarah Kuponyi decided to do something about it.
She founded Alora Reusable Pads, which produces eco-friendly, reusable menstrual hygiene products for girls in Nigeria, the Guardian reports.
"Being a young girl in Nigeria and having to face your period can be very challenging," Kuponyi says.
"Often, girls opt to stay at home throughout the entire length of their bleeding, missing school on a regular basis in fear of ridicule and shame."
So she started the company, which now employs six people and hopes to have 500 of its products in Nigerian schools by 2030.
Alora is one of six winners of Reckitt Benckiser's Fight for Access Accelerator, which aims to address sanitation, water, and hygiene challenges in some of the world's most under-served countries.
The accelerator will give Kuponyi access to two boot camps with more than 30 hours of skill-based volunteering, 36 hours of support from Reckitt mentors, and nine Reckitt mentors.
The other winners are: Let's Build for Humanity, which builds toilets for communities in Nigeria; Toiletpride, which collects recyclable waste and turns it into fertilizer and livestock feed
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