DMU launches $1.3 million project to aid economic growth in The Gambia

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Prof. Momodou Sallah. Professor at De Montfort University Leicester (DMU)

By: De Montfort University

A professor at De Montfort University Leicester (DMU) has announced the launch of a $1.3 million project to help bring better education, job creation, entrepreneurship and, ultimately, sustained economic growth to The Gambia.

Momodou Sallah, Professor of Teaching and Learning and the Director of the Centre for Academic Innovation at DMU, has formed a partnership with the Gambian Government, which is promoting the importance of entrepreneurship, the enhancement of scientific research and technology, and the developing of skills among Gambian youth.

DMU will introduce entrepreneurship and employability programmes as well as an ‘innovation hub’ and a placement and internship unit.

DMU will also act as a consultancy service for the provision of lectures and making sure courses meet the highest standards.

The work will be with the Emerging Centre of Excellence on Science, Engineering and Technology for Entrepreneurship (ECESETE) under the auspices of The Gambia’s Ministry of Higher Education, Science, Research and Technology.

Youth unemployment is a major concern for The Gambia and it has contributed to the large-scale migration of Gambians to other African nations and continents to find work.

DMU has extensive experience and an excellent reputation for working with industry and cultivating entrepreneurs.

So the university will bring those skills to ECESETE via an Incubation and Innovation Hub, to commercialise products which can then be developed and taken to market.

DMU will aim to make young people more employable in The Gambia by training them as the entrepreneurs of the future.

Professor Sallah said the development was both exciting and poignant time for him as he was born and raised in The Gambia and is aware of the help his home nation needs to boost the prospects of young people.

He said: “I grew up in The Gambia and I had to experience the difficulties involved in education and making progress.

“I am a professor now and to be able to use my position and my privilege and my knowledge to build something better in The Gambia is brilliant. That is what motivates me.

“I see myself as a scholar-activist. I cannot sit in an ivory tower and pontificate about the situations I have come from. I need to do something about it

“We will see 60 engineers come through these courses each year and each of them will be encouraged to use science, engineering and technology for social good and help develop the economy. Imagine the impact that that would have, not just for The Gambia but for the rest of Africa.”

The role of DMU will be to act as a consultancy service for the provision of lectures, guidance on quality assurance, entrepreneurship, and employability programs at ECESETE. There will also be a ‘disruptive lab’ that will pick apart current business methods and rebuild them into something better.

“If we are going to change things, we need to disrupt the methods we are using, break them down completely and see what we can do better”, Professor Sallah explained. “It can be a very uncomfortable process but it changes the mindset of everybody and helps us focus on how to make improvements.

“Education has to be responsive to the environment it is in if we are to progress. DMU has laid out in its strategic plan for the next few years that we are to be an empowering university. This is exactly what DMU is doing here in The Gambia with this partnership. We are empowering people to make a difference in their country.”

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Sainey M.K. Marenah
Mr. Sainey M.K. Marenah is a prominent Gambian journalist and the founding editor of The Alkamba Times. He previously held the position of Head of Communications at the Constitutional Review Commission (CRC) and served as a Communications and PR Consultant for The Gambia Pilot Program under Gamworks. Additionally, Mr. Marenah was the social media strategist and editor at Gambia Radio and Television Services and served as the Banjul Correspondent for Voice of America Radio. With a focus on human rights and developmental journalism, Mr. Marenah has established a significant presence in the Gambian media landscape, particularly in new media environments. His career began in 2008 as a junior reporter at The Point Newspaper, where he advanced to become Chief Correspondent. He later joined The Standard Newspaper in Banjul as Editorial Assistant and Head of News. Mr. Marenah is known for covering some of the most critical stories during the former and current administrations, including high-profile treason cases involving former military chiefs from 2009 to 2012. After his arrest and imprisonment by the previous regime of President Yahya Jammeh in 2014, he relocated to Dakar, Senegal, where he continues to work as a freelance journalist for various local and international media organizations, including the BBC, Al Jazeera, VOA, and ZDF TV in Germany. He is also a co-founder of the Banjul-based Media Center for Research and Development, an institution dedicated to research and development initiatives. As a journalist and communication expert dedicated to supporting the Gambia's transitional process, Mr. Sainey M.K. Marenah plays a significant role in developing a media and communications platform aimed at enhancing civic participation and raising awareness of the requirements for transitional governance. His efforts contribute to the country's ongoing movement toward democratization. In addition to his work in Gambia, Mr. Marenah has traveled extensively across Europe, Africa, and the United States as a professional journalist and has participated in various local and international media training programs. He is currently based in the United States.

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