The Chairman/CEO, Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NiDCOM), Abike Dabiri-Erewa, has expressed great pride for Eniola Shokunbi, a 12-year-old Nigerian-American girl, who has made a remarkable scientific feat.
According to the statement released by the Commission, Dabiri-Erewa commended Shokunbi, who invented a low-cost (costs $60) air purifier.
The device won a $11.5 million grant from the Connecticut State Bond Commission to produce and install the air purifiers in all schools across the state, as a result.
The NiDCOM Boss notes the young Nigerian inventor has made her mark in the history of science and medicine, which will go a long way toward improving lives, creating jobs, and providing alternative means to quality healthcare.
Eniola Shokunbi, the young inventor, is a fifth-grade student at Commodore MacDonough STEM Academy in Middletown, Connecticut.
The equipment, which was created for the purpose of a school science project, in the event of another pandemic arose, quickly became a scientific breakthrough, worth international recognition.