Participants at the CORY REVCEL Training in Basse |
The governor of the Upper River Region has called
on youth of the region to tap the opportunities provided by The Gambia
government for personal growth and development.
Governor Omar Ceesay said almost all the entire
projects that the government has implemented have youth component which if
utilised by the youth would help them to contribute meaningfully towards
personal and national development.
He made this remark during the official opening of
12-day training for 27 young people under the Rural Entrepreneurial Venture
Creation and Experimental Learning (REVCEL) underway at the regional education conference
hall in Basse Mansajang,
The training was oanised by the Creating Opportunities for Rural
Youth (CORY) The Gambia project.
Governor Ceesay said the importance of such
training in URR, one of the farthest regions of The Gambia, cannot be
overemphasized as entrepreneurship is the way forward towards national
development.
He said the young people of the country should
change their attitude towards national development crusade, noting that the
youth have to engage in the projects brought to them by the government, to be
able to earn resources that will improve their living condition.
The URR governor said the government is committed
towards youth empowerment as “the political will is already there”.
He pointed out that the government can only bring
projects and create the conducive environment for young people to explore; it
is the responsibility of the youth to utilise those opportunities.
Governor Ceesay commended CORY for taking the
training to his region as the “region is one of the most vulnerable regions in
terms of development”.
URR is predominantly a farming region but the
governor said “farming alone cannot lift us from where we are”.He said there should be entrepreneurs to buy
the agricultural produce; hence “the training for youth on entrepreneurs is
welcomed”.
The deputy Governor of URR, Cherno Barra Touray,
told the youth:“Without determination
and commitment, you are just going to waste government resources and if the
mantle of leadership if given to you, you are going to make us fail.”
The financial controller of the Global Youth
Innovation Network (GYIN-Gambia), Mariam Saine, said CORY is a new initiative
that supports young rural women and men in West and Central Africa to become
entrepreneurs.
She said the three-year project is being
implemented in four countries – The Gambia, Nigeria, Cameroon and
Benin – and
it is focused on people between the ages of 18 and 35 who are involved in
agricultural production and activities associated with rural markets.
Mrs Saine said the project targets rural youth
institutions for business training, advocacy, networking and knowledge exchange
and it has male-female ratio of 1:1.
“I believe after undergoing a rigorous twelve days
of training, the participants would be able to create their own venture or
start up a business,” she said.
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