WARDA
News Release
Bamako, Mali
3 December 2004
WARDA Board of Trustees
Responds to the Ivorian Crisis
The Board of Trustees of the
Africa Rice Center (WARDA) met at the International Livestock Research
Institute (ILRI), Nairobi, Kenya, from 30 November to 2 December 2004 to
examine the current situation of the Africa Rice Center following the
resurgence of hostilities in its host country, Côte d’Ivoire. This release
is to inform colleagues and friends of WARDA of recommendations and decisions
regarding future operations of the Center.
The Board regrets the death on 6 November 2004 of Dr Robert Carsky, a senior
scientist with WARDA, as a result of the bombing in Bouaké of the French
barracks where he had taken refuge. The Board expresses its deepest sympathy
and condolences to the Carsky family.
Because of the prevailing insecurity in Côte d’Ivoire, the Center evacuated
its internationally-recruited staff and senior non-Ivorian support staff. The
WARDA Headquarters at M’bé (Bouaké), including offices, laboratories,
field facilities and genebank, remain intact. Activities in Côte d’Ivoire
have been reduced to a minimum. It is expected that the Center will resume
operations at its Bouaké Headquarters only after the cessation of hostilities
and when conditions have been adjudged to be conducive for WARDA’s
operations.
The Board of Trustees would like to assure the research and development
community that the Center meanwhile continues to undertake its activities
through its existing stations in St Louis, Senegal; Ibadan, Nigeria; and
Bamako, Mali.
Consequent upon these developments, the Board of Trustees has made the
following decisions:
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The Africa Rice Center
will relocate its management, research and administrative staff to Cotonou,
Benin, and utilize facilities made available by the International
Institute for Tropical Agriculture (IITA) and the Institut national de
recherche agronomique du Bénin (INRAB).
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Staff evacuated from Côte
d’Ivoire, and those located in Bamako, will be relocated to Cotonou,
Benin, as soon as the Center resumes after its end-of-year break.
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Staff normally located in
St. Louis, Senegal, and in Ibadan, Nigeria, will continue their work as
usual at those locations.
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The Board of Trustees
approved a planning document prepared by Management for the implementation
of the relocation to Cotonou, Benin.
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The Board reassures staff
of its support and urges Management to undertake all steps necessary to
facilitate resettlement of staff and their families at the new locations.
This will include appropriate counseling and team building as soon as
possible.
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The Board has requested
Management to take measures to minimize the risk for those local staff who
have been retained specifically to maintain the facilities in Côte
d’Ivoire.
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The Board has agreed on a
contingency plan so that should it not be possible to move to Cotonou
within the anticipated timeframe, WARDA will operate in a decentralized
mode utilizing facilities in St Louis, Ibadan and possibly Bamako.
In arriving at these
decisions, the Board took cognizance of the current exercise of the CGIAR Task
Force on Sub-Saharan Africa and the principles embedded within the Collective
Action framework of the new Alliance of the Centers. It sought to identify
opportunities for optimizing the competences of the Africa Rice Center, given
the recent advances of the NERICA in Africa and beyond.
In this regard, the Board recommends that, within the current Strategic and
Mid-Term Plans, the following activities should receive highest priority in
the near term:
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NERICA seed
multiplication and distribution using strengthened private-public
partnerships and farmer associations;
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Continued aggressive rice
breeding programs for African lowlands and uplands, including further
research on the physiology and genetics of NERICA;
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Assessment of the spread
and adoption of WARDA rice varieties, their use in other breeding
programs, and their impact.
The Board is concerned that
the cost of evacuation and relocation requires additional resources beyond the
Center’s current budget and appeals to the donor community for additional
financial support to complete the above actions.
The Board is conscious of the enormous stress caused throughout the WARDA and
associated communities by the loss of Dr. Robert Carsky, by the suffering of
his family, and by the disruption of personal and professional lives of staff
caused by the renewed armed conflict in Côte d’Ivoire. Management is
requested to make every effort to alleviate the stress and concern of staff
and their families, and take all necessary measures to ensure an attractive,
productive and safe working environment.
The Board, Management and
Staff take this opportunity to thank the WARDA Council of Ministers, the CGIAR
and the donor community, and partners for the generous expressions of sympathy
and support during this difficult period.