Group picture of the participants |
No fewer than 30 media practitioners mainly
editors, web-designers, radio presenters and online reporters from the print
and electronic media 15th March, 2014 hold a day long capacity
enhancement on environmental editing, reporting and broadcasting, at the
Wellingara Horticulture Model Centre.
Organised by the Biodiversity Action Journalists-The Gambia
(BAJ-Gambia), through funding from UNDP GEF-Small Grants Programme
(UNDEP/GEF-SGP), the grant is meant to implement a twelve-month project on
public awareness on ‘Environmental Protection and Mitigation’ nationwide.
The objective of the project is designed to promote public participation
in Protected Area Management of environmental and biodiversity resources for
posterity.
BAJ-The Gambia is an environmental and natural resources journalists’
organisation, with a membership of 70 practising journalists from both print
and electronic (social) media community radios and youth activists across the
country, aimed at advocating sustainable use of biological and natural
resources for generations yet unborn.
Mamadou Edrisa Njie, BAJ-Gambia social-secretary said the project is
meant to protect and mitigate the environment, working in collaboration with
Gambia Press Union, National Environmental Agency (NEA), Young Journalists
Association of The Gambia (YJAG), MOBSE and other relevant stakeholders across
the country.
Noting that, since its inception the organization had held a series of
awareness sensitisation in all corners of the country. The project, Njie added,
targets environmental journalists, forest-users, local authorities, local
farmers and relevant stakeholders for greater protection and conservation of
the country’s remaining biological and natural resources, thus reducing
potential climate change impact on agriculture.
A representative from the Ministry of Basic and Secondary Education (MOBSE)
Gibril Barry, expressed his ministry’s continues determination to work with the
BAJ-The Gambia. He explained that with the emergence of climate change and
new emerging challenges, there has been a change on the curriculum.
Barry added that climate change, environmental and others issues,
such as HIV/AIDS have been included in the educational curriculum, with the
sole objective of changing the mind-set of the younger generation.
This programme, he added, cannot be done exclusively by the MOBSE, thus
the bold move to sign an MOU with the BAJ-The Gambia, taking into account some
of the issues they will teach in the curriculum. He thus hailed BAJ-Gambia for
coming up with such a bold initiative.
The president of the Gambia Press Union, Bai Emil Touray described the
training as important, as according to him, the protection of the environment
is a collective responsibility. This, he added, is important for journalists or
media practitioners, so as to enable them play their rightful role in the
protection of the environment.
Touray pointed out that as members of society they have a social
responsibility, which includes providing the public with accurate and
progressive information. He expressed delight at the move taken by
BAJ-Gambia, as he implored on the participants to take the training with
seriousness.
In his keynote address, Abdoulie Sawo, department of Parks and Wildlife
Management who doubles as board chairperson of the BAJ-Gambia, said his
department is tasked with the responsibility of protecting the biodiversity.
The Gambia, he pointed out, has eight protected areas, which he added,
represent a few portion of the total landscape. Despite this, he said, the
country has in recent years been faced with some environmental challenges.
Sawo maintained that as a result, the department is in the process of
creating what he called ‘Biosphere Reserve’, a kind of protected area that
exist all over the world. “So in The Gambia we also thought about the
Niumi Area that could also be a biosphere reserve, like Delta De Saloum in
Senegal,” he added. He then hailed the members of BAJ-Gambia for
their foresight and dedication in creating biodiversity.
Sawo also expressed his department’s unwavering collaboration and total
support to the media in their effort to manage and protect the country’s
biodiversity.
The training, however, was punctuated with presentations on key thematic
issues, such as Media’s Reporting on Climate Governance in Africa, Importance
of Online Media in Today’s Society, the Convention of Biological Diversity and wildlife
act among a host of others.
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