BOX 10 (continued)
Although the project is still under execution, some
key changes have been observed in the communities. In terms of women’s empowerment, an
emphasis has been put on the involvement of
community women in sustainable livelihoods
activities generally undertaken by men. In a
community where women are not involved in
animal healthcare, men and women can now sit
together to attend workshops and practical
training sessions for animal healthcare. Moreover,
trained women are more eager to put in practice
the acquired knowledge.
As in most indigenous communities, women
are considered as the guardians of traditional
knowledge on medicinal plants. Their expertise
is commonly required for the documentation of
traditional knowledge and practices for the
conservation of biodiversity used in human and/or
animal healthcare and related ailments treated
or relieved by such herbs/plants. The project is
building the capacity of women to apply their
existing knowledge in conjunction with new skills
and knowledge, and in doing so to have a positive
impact on the livelihoods and welfare of the
community at large.
The project is helping to preserve traditional
knowledge and to pass this on to younger
generations, thus building their capacity for forest
management using the best of indigenous and
conventional expertise.
Two other projects (CMR/SGP/OP4/RAF/07/01
or CMR/SGP/OP4/RAF/07/02) with indigenous
communities are building capacity in other
68
livelihood activities: through these projects, Bakola
and Bagyeli indigenous peoples, and especially
those who are gatherers and hunters, have been
involved in agriculture for subsistence or for
income generation, and in beekeeping.
The Government of Cameroon plans to implement
a 5-year project entitled the Cameroon Millennium
Villages Project (CMVP) with the financial support
of the Government of Japan and in partnership
with the United Nations system. This project
intends to improve the living conditions of the
target population in 2 clusters of Cameroon by
offering them a range of supports designed to
contribute to the achievement of the MDGs. The
focus areas are Meyomessi and its surrounding
areas, situated in the Forest Region. Particular
attention will be given to the Baka indigenous
peoples. A GEF regional project entitled conservation of trans-boundary biodiversity in the minkebe
– odzala - dja interzone in Gabon, Congo and
Cameroon will contribute to support this process.
The project will assist the three governments in
designing and implementing a coherent land-use
plan that designates protected areas, permanent
forest and rural development areas, building the
capacity to control resource use, to monitor trends
in biodiversity and ecosystem functions, through
an effective law enforcement system, collaborative
management schemes with the private sector and
communities, including, in particular, indigenous
people, and implementation of a cost-effective
monitoring system.
Source: UNDP Cameroon
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