Njie and Faye in Ghana |
The
training was the third in a series, as the first two trainings were organised
for the French-speaking countries in 2013 in Benin and Burkina Faso.
The
third training attracted participants from The Gambia, Ghana, Liberia, Nigeria,
Rwanda and Sierra Leone.
The
workshop targeted farmer organisations, policy makers, local authorities, rural
leaders, NGOs and other sectors of society.
The
training course was aimed primarily at those involved in the dynamics of
territorial development and the promotion of local products; which would be
interactive alternating presentations of concepts, illustrated with case
studies, situational exercises and field visits.
At
the end of the course, trainees would be able to assess the potential strengths
and weaknesses of quality products related to the origin and local know-how,
including the importance of the link to the territory, conduct inventories of products that are potentially eligible as origin-linked quality Products
and geographical indications, understanding the specificities of organising
supply chains around origin linked products (consortiums) and marketing OLPs
develop strategies and action plans for the development of the most promising
origin-linked quality products, learn about sources of information on OLPs and
develop a network for mutual support.
Speaking
with reporters, both Njie and Faye expressed their delight to be selected among
30 worthy participants to attend the training and promised to share the
knowledge gained with others through face-to-face discussions, group
discussions, and the social media-Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Skype.
According
to Njie, quality products related to the origin have a reputation, quality or
characteristics essentially due to their origin in relation to resources
(natural and human) anchored on the production area.
Representing
both a heritage to preserve and differentiation potential in the market, these
products could be an important lever for sustainable development.
Njie
said the training would take into consideration the specific needs of the
participants, given their objectives and context, to prepare them to act as
resource persons and key stakeholders in the identification of origin linked
quality products and the inventories of such products.
Njie is director of progrogrammes and Faye is director of communication Biodiversity Action Journalists Gambia (BAJ Gambia). Both commended BAJ-Gambia management committee for the unflinching support and urged
others to support the organisation in its efforts at promoting sustainable
environmental management.
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