Los BaƱos,
Philippines - Secretary General Arjun Bahadur Thapa of the South Asian
Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) has invited the International Rice
Research Institute (IRRI) to address the SAARC ministerial assembly on research
activities that will benefit rice farmers and consumers in the region. This is
one of the concrete steps that senior officials from SAARC and IRRI agreed on
at the conclusion of the visit of the SAARC delegation to IRRI on 7-9 April
2015.
With the secretary general were SAARC directors L. Savithri and
MJH Jabed as well as Rosalind McKenzie, regional cooperation specialist of the
Asian Development Bank (ADB) and Jesusito Tranquilino, ADB consultant, were
also in the delegation.
According to Bruce Tolentino, IRRI deputy director general for
communication and partnerships, “the current memorandum of understanding (MOU)
with SAARC is project-based, specific to the Stress-Tolerant Rice for Africa
and South Asia (STRASA) project. It will be important to raise the partnership
to the level of SAARC and IRRI as institutions.” Such an institutional partnership already
exists, for instance, between IRRI and the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN).
Secretary General Thapa said areas of potential collaboration
include soil mapping, use of ICT through IRRI’s nutrient manager project, and
the development of a genebank for South Asia.
“But even at this early stage, while we don’t have the status
of a development partner yet, we can already work on including technical people
from SAARC countries in IRRI’s various training programs,” said Tolentino. “It
is already an open door for technical exchange.”
Tolentino also suggested that arrangements for germplasm
exchange be extended to all SAARC members in addition to Bangladesh, India, and
Nepal.”
“I am very happy that SAARC is joining efforts with IRRI,” said
Abdelbagi Ismail, leader of the STRASA project. With SAARC’s role especially at
the policy level, it will greatly help us move across borders and make climate
smart-ready varieties such as drought-, flood-, and salinity-tolerant rice, be available
to poor farmers wherever they are in South Asia.”
IRRI representatives in Nepal, India, and Bangladesh will work
with the SAARC Secretariat toward raising the partnership to the institutional
level.
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