Prof. Philliph Mutisya paid a visit to the State of Delaware in the U.S to progress the Diaspora University and Africa development. He met with Sam Nambiosi, an Engineer with extensive expertise in IT system automation. Sam worked at JP Morgan bank. The two talked about the Diaspora University plan and how the IT professional who has a network of systems and resources can apply some of the resources in Diaspora University. Prof. Mutisya also met a group of Africans. He introduced them to the Diaspora University Town (DUT) project through a brochure and asked them to invest in the DUT townhouse development opportunity.
Prof. Mutisya graduated from the University of Massachusetts (UMass) at Amherst with a doctorate of education. He has had a career of over 30 year’s teaching at universities in North Carolina that include: North Carolina Central University, North Carolina State University, University of North Carolina at Fayetteville, and University of Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Today, the professor is working on the Diaspora University opening plan. Diaspora University development is currently ongoing in Kenya. The Diaspora University is being developed in a town setting called the Diaspora University Town (DUT). The ongoing development plan will lead to the following achievements: a university that grows to 5,000 students and has a Medical Hospital; a town with over 15,000 jobs and 25,000 residents; and, over 300 MSMEs (Micro, Small & Medium Enterprises) that include a Medicine Vaccine Plant and DUT Credit Bank.
In 1989 when Prof. Mutisya got his PhD and thereafter took his job in North Carolina, the U.S GDP was about $5.5 trillion. Today the U.S GDP is over $28 trillion. The professor's message to Africans in the U.S and in Diasporas is that Diaspora University and Africans should progress the growth of Kenya and Africa GDP. Kenya GDP can surpass the $1 trillion mark in 2050. The GDP of Africa can grow to over $25 trillion in the next 25 years.
In the next 25 years Africa will be part of growing the world GDP from current $105 trillion to over $150 trillion. The Diaspora Africans have the resources of intellect and money. Africa has the land resources, natural resources and human resources waiting to be made productive to meet the African needs of food, healthcare, water, housing, clean environment and other needs.