DG says NABDA set to achieve greater heights in 2017
The National Biotechnology Development
Agency (NABDA) says the agency is poised to achieve greater heights
in biotechnology research this year in spite of the challenges of
2016.
Prof. Lucy Ogbadu, the Director-General
of the agency Ogbadu, who made this resolve in an interview on Thursday in Abuja, specifically mentioned the
turbulence of anti-GMO crusaders in 2016, saying that the agency was
able to weather the storm.
“ 2016 was a year when the agency
faced its fiercest opposition on the account of people and
organisations opposed to genetically modified foods but the agency
has come out stronger.
“In view of the extreme care and
caution with which the GMO technique is conducted, there are no risks
or hazards resulting from products that emanate from GMOs.
“Genetically modifies products are
not new to mankind as it includes the yogurt that is consumed without
fear and vaccines that is administered for healthcare.
“I reiterate that these products
though not yet in our markets here are safe to consume; those against
the GMO are talking without basic understanding of its process or
just out of mere fear.
“Since the structure of the genetic
material found within the nuclei of the plant is known, biotechnology
or genetic engineering provides the opportunity for precision in
selecting the exact gene that has the desired trait,’’ Ogbadu
said.
The director-general said that in 2016,
the agency partnered with the National Institute for Pharmaceutical
Research and Development (NIPRD) to set up HIV and AIDS intervention
clinic.
According to her, the collaboration
with NIPRD and other agencies like the National Action Committee on
HIV and AIDS (NACA) as well as Aids Health Care Foundation (AHF) will
achieve the desired results.
“The aim of the programme is to
minimise the number of undetected HIV positive individuals in the
workplace and eliminate budding infections.
“It will also help to determine the
prevalence of HIV infection amongst staff of NABDA and Lugbe
community and create more awareness and eliminate HIV stigma.
“Develop efficient HIV and AIDS
intervention for vulnerable groups as well integrate HIV testing with
basic clinical tests of opportunistic infections,’’ she said.
She expressed optimism that all these
accomplishments were just stepping stones for what the agency hoped
to realise in 2017.
Ogbadu said that the oppositions helped
the agency to be more focused and even go further to achieve,
especially in capacity building of its personnel.
She said that NABDA also built the
capacity of its staff by sponsoring them to do doctorate programmes
in relevant courses and one of such people was Miss Ijeoma Akaogu, a
senior scientific officer of the department of agricultural
biotechnology.
“Ijeoma has been awarded the
prestigious Norman Borlaug LEAP Fellowship funded by U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID).
“She is studying Linkage Mapping for
Striga resistance genes in early maturing tropical maize lines as
part of her PhD thesis research project,’’ she said..
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