Finland’s Prime Minister Sanna Marin had a peaceful day on Wednesday after giving power to a 16-year-old girl as part of a campaign to promote girls’ rights.

Aava Murto, from Vaasky in southern Finland, said she was having an “exciting day” as she interacted with media on the steps of parliament after meeting with the chancellor of justice, reported AFP.

In the afternoon, she also had a meeting with Finland’s MPs and the minister for development and foreign trade.

Murto, who actively campaigns on climate and human rights issues, said she had “learnt some new things about legislation.”

Her message to decision-makers has been that girls “need to realise more how important they are, and how they are just as good at technology as boys,” she told AFP.

“I think young people could teach adults to be more innovative and think more about the future,” she added.

Asked if she would be interested in doing the job full-time in a few years, Murto told AFP, “It’s not up to me to decide that, but possibly, yeah!”

The power exchange was a part of the global campaign coincides with the United Nation’s International Day of the Girl Child on Sunday, and will also allow girls take on the jobs of ministers in Kenya, Peru, Sudan and Vietnam.

The senior jobs at Microsoft, Samsung, Facebook and Twitter will go to teenage girls in countries, including El Salvador, Guatemala, the Netherlands and the Philippines.