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ICARDA News
International
Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas
P.O. Box 5466,
Aleppo, Syria Phone: (963-21) 2213433, 2213477, 2225112, 2225012 Fax:
(963-21) 2213490, 2225105; E-mail: ICARDA@CGIAR.ORG
Website: www.icarda.org
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Media
contact: Surendra Varma (s.varma@CGIAR.ORG),
Ravi R. Prasad (r.prasad@cgiar.org)
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Fighting
poverty with herbal and medicinal plants
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Scientists
from all over the world began deliberations on the role of herbal,
medicinal and aromatic plants in improving the livelihoods of the
rural poor.
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Dr Mona Bishay (right), Director, NENA division,
IFAD; Dr Mahmoud Solh (center), Director General of ICARDA;
and Dr Remi Kahane, Executive Secretary, GHI, at the opening
session of the Regional Expert Workshop on the Role
of Herbal, Medicinal and Aromatic Plants, ICARDA, 10-12
July.
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Addressing researchers attending the regional expert workshop held
at the International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas
(ICARDA), Aleppo, Syria, Dr Mona Bishay, director of the Near East
and North Africa division of the International Fund for Agricultural
Development (IFAD) said that several obstacles hinder full exploitation
of the potential of herbal, medicinal and aromatic plants (HMAPs)
in reducing poverty and improving livelihoods of rural people in the
region.
"Poor local technology, inadequate business and entrepreneurial
skills and awareness on quality requirements, limited knowledge on
properties of HMAPs beyond traditional knowledge, and limited access
to intellectual property rights restrict production and the use and
marketability of the HMAPs,'' Dr Bishay said.
Underscoring the need to analyze and find means to address the obstacles,
Dr Bishay said the most important handicap was the inability of the
collectors and growers of such plants to take advantage of potential
markets due to lack of access to resources, inadequate extension and
training services, lack of improved technology and business skills,
insufficient marketing information and local organizational skills
that could enable them to take advantage of emerging market opportunities.
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Participants of the Regional Expert
Workshop on the Role of Herbal, Medicinal and Aromatic Plants,
ICARDA, 10-12 July.
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Dr Mahmoud Solh, director general of ICARDA, said it was regrettable
that indigenous knowledge on HMAPs was not backed up with adequate
use of modern technology, despite the fact that folk medicine still
serves 80 percent of the rural population in the world.
"HMAP sector faces various challenges and constraints, such as
over-exploitation of naturally occurring species, fragmented approaches
and projects that address only limited aspects of selected HMAP value
chains, lack of quality control standards of locally produced HMAPs
and products, and poor distribution of benefits in value chains,"
Dr Solh said.
"Our partners in National Agricultural Research and Extension
Systems possess rich knowledge on HMAPs and this gives us a great
opportunity to add valuable new crops to our joint knowledge of eco-geography
and farming systems in the NENA region," said Dr Solh, elaborating
ICARDA's role in research on HMAPs. "Tremendous room for growth
and export opportunities are available if quality products are available
that can compete with other suppliers. New science and technology
can be deployed to understand potential new uses for processing, transforming,
and adding value to natural products - with the purpose of generating
income for poor farmers."
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Participants of the Regional Expert
Workshop on the Role of Herbal, Medicinal and Aromatic Plants,
ICARDA, 10-12 July.
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Dr Remi Kahane, executive secretary of the Global Horticulture Initiative,
emphasized the need to promote HMAPs through effective marketing and
product development to support small farmers.
The three-day workshop focused on evolving strategic directions in
finding solutions to the challenges, constraints and prospects of
using herbal, medicinal and aromatic plants in improving the livelihoods
of the rural poor.
For more information : Dr Ahmed Sidahmed (a.sidahmed@cgiar.org)
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About
ICARDA: Established in 1977, ICARDA (www.icarda.org)
serves the entire developing world for the improvement of barley, lentil, and
faba bean; and dry-area developing countries for the on-farm management of water,
improvement of nutrition and productivity of small ruminants (sheep and goats),
and rehabilitation and management of rangelands. In the Central and West Asia
and North Africa (CWANA) region, ICARDA is responsible for the improvement of
durum and bread wheats, chickpea, pasture and forage legumes and farming systems;
and for the protection and enhancement of the natural resource base of water,
land, and biodiversity. The Consultative Group on International Agricultural
Research (CGIAR) (www.cgiar.org) is a strategic alliance of countries, international
and regional organizations, and private foundations supporting15 international
research centers that mobilizes cutting-edge science to promote sustainable development
by reducing hunger and poverty, improving human nutrition and health, and protecting
the environment. |