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| | WARDA
News Release
Cotonou, Benin
22 March 2005
Africa
Rice Center Announces New Board Chair, Vice Chair
 Mr
Gaston Grenier, a Canadian national, was elected as the new Chair and Mrs Mary
Uzo B. Mokwunye, a Nigerian national, as the new Vice Chair of the Board of
Trustees of the Africa Rice Center (WARDA). Both of them have been serving as
Board members.
“We are delighted to have elected Mr Grenier for his dynamism and enthusiasm
as well as his extensive international experience. He will be ably assisted by
Mrs Mokwunye
who has strong administrative and research management skills,”
the outgoing Board Chair Prof Musangi stated. He added that the decision took
into consideration the importance given by the Center to gender equality and
diversity.
The announcements were made at the conclusion of the 25th Board meeting, 13-18
March 2005. The meeting was significant because it was being held for the first
time in Cotonou, Benin, where the Center’s headquarters has been located since
January 2005 because of renewed strife in Côte d’Ivoire.
About 90% of its Management, Administration, Finance and Research staff have
been accommodated in the facilities kindly offered by the International
Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) and the Institut national de
recherches agronomiques du Bénin (INRAB).
Some of the other significant decisions made by the Board during the meeting
are:
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In
view of their traumatic experience and several displacements, including two
evacuations within 3 years from their headquarters near Bouaké, Côte
d’Ivoire, the Africa Rice Center staff will operate from Cotonou with an
initial planning horizon of 5 years during which the decision will be
regularly reviewed. “This will give the stability needed for scientists to
carry out their important research agenda,” Prof Musangi explained.
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However,
Bouaké will remain the Center’s permanent headquarters. The Center’s
Campus, including its research and genebank facilities in Bouaké, continues
to be intact.
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The
Center’s staff located in its sub-regional stations in Senegal and Nigeria
will continue to work as usual at those locations.
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The
Center is not abandoning Bamako, Mali, which had kindly hosted its research
staff after the 2002 Ivoirian crisis. It would like to carry out projects
there, in partnership with the Institut
d’économie rurale (IER), funded through restricted project grants.
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Dr
Kanayo F. Nwanze will complete his second term as the WARDA Director General
in November 2006. In view of its unique structure and constitution as an
Association of African member states as well as an international Center
supported by the Consultative
Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), WARDA follows a
long process for recruiting a Director General. Prof Musangi announced that
the Board had approved the process for the recruitment of a new Director
General who will succeed Dr Nwanze.
Prof.
Musangi thanked the Government of Benin, IITA and INRAB for hosting the Center.
He thanked all the Board Members, particularly Dr Edwin C. Price, the outgoing
Vice Chair, for their support. He congratulated the Management and the staff for
their outstanding ability to recover from severe setbacks.
“It is truly amazing how much the staff have been able to accomplish despite
all their difficulties,” he commented, referring to the Center's recent
exciting weeklong research review and planning meeting in Cotonou, involving all
its research staff and several partners from the national agricultural research
systems (NARS), international nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and CGIAR
Centers.
He expressed profound happiness over the growing popularity of the NERICA
varieties – the Center’s flagship technology and the CGIAR’s pride – in
eastern Africa, especially Uganda and Kenya.
“Prof. Musangi will continue to be a great ambassador for the Africa Rice
Center. We are very grateful to him and to Ed Price for their courage and
steadfast support to the Center during one of the most difficult periods in its
life,” Dr Nwanze said.
| About the Africa Rice Center (WARDA)
Africa
Rice Center (WARDA) is an autonomous intergovernmental research
association of African member states. WARDA is also one of the 15
international agricultural research Centers supported by the Consultative
Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR).
WARDA’s mission is to contribute to poverty alleviation and food
security in Africa, through research, development and partnership
activities aimed at increasing the productivity and profitability of the
rice sector in ways that ensure the sustainability of the farming
environment.
WARDA hosts the African
Rice Initiative (ARI), the Regional
Rice Research and Development Network for West and Central Africa (ROCARIZ),
and the Inland
Valley Consortium (IVC). It also supports the Coordination Unit of
the Eastern and Central African Rice Research Network (ECARRN), based in
Tanzania.
Since January 2005, WARDA has been
working out of the International
Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA)-Benin station in Cotonou,
having relocated from its headquarters in Bouaké, Côte d’Ivoire,
because of the Ivoirian crisis. WARDA has regional research stations
near St Louis, Senegal and at IITA in Ibadan, Nigeria. |
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