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SHOTLIST: New action plan launched to enhance Somali women’s role in

Somalia’s maritime sector

TRT: 5:18
SOURCE: UNSOM STRATEGIC COMMUNICATIONS.
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LANGUAGE: SOMALI/ENGLISH NATURAL SOUND
DATELINE: 15 FEBRUARY 2023, MOGADISHU, SOMALIA

SHOT LIST:
1. Wide shot cabin – The Women in Maritime Sector (WiMS) National Action Plan launch
ceremony in Mogadishu.
2. Med shot – Foreign diplomats attending the launch ceremony.
3. Close up shot – A foreign diplomat attending the launch ceremony.
4. Wide shot – Officials attending the launch ceremony.
5. Wide shot – Officials attending the launch ceremony.
6. Close-up shot – Somali Deputy Police Commissioner, Gen. Zakia Mohamed, attending
the launch ceremony.
7. Med shot – Somalia’s Deputy Prime Minister Salah Ahmed Jama; the Minister of Ports
and Marine Transport, Abdullahi Ahmed Jama; and the Deputy Police Commissioner,
Gen. Zakia Mohamed; attending the launch ceremony.
8. Close-up shot – The Federal Minister of Women and Human Rights Development,
Khadija Mohamed Diriye, signing the WiMS National Action Plan.
9. Med shot – The Minister of Ports and Marine Transport, Abdullahi Ahmed Jama, signing
the WiMS National Action Plan.
10. Wide shot – Deputy Prime Minister Salah Ahmed Jama launching the WiMS National
Action Plan.
11. Med shot – Deputy Prime Minister Salah Ahmed Jama and the Minister of Ports and
Marine Transport, Abdullahi Ahmed Jama, holding the WiMS National Action Plan.
12. Soundbite: (Somali) Salah Ahmed Jama, Somalia’s Deputy Prime Minister
“The ‘Blue Economy’ that we want to exploit includes fisheries from our waters and all
the goods that pass through it; we also have to consider the value chain from the
fisherman, to the buyer, to the marketer and to the investor. In order to succeed in
this venture, we need to empower women across the whole value chain. I can assure
you that if we put all our efforts and work towards empowering women, especially in
the ‘Blue Economy’ and around climate change, we will definitely have success.”
13. Wide shot – Deputy Prime Minister Salah Ahmed Jama; the Minister of Ports and
Marine Transport, Abdullahi Ahmed Jama, and the Deputy Police Commissioner, Gen.
Zakia Mohamed, at the launch ceremony.
14. Close-up shot – A participant listening at the launch ceremony.
15. Med shot – Participants at the launch ceremony.
16. Close-up shot – The Minister of Ports and Marine Transport, Abdullahi Ahmed Jama,
taking notes.
17. Close-up shot - The Minister of Women and Human Rights Development, Khadija
Mohamed Diriye, listening.
18. Close-up shot - Somalia’s Deputy Prime Minister Salah Ahmed Jama listening.
19. Wide shot - Somalia’s Deputy Prime Minister Salah Ahmed Jama, the Minister of Ports
and Marine Transport, Abdullahi Ahmed Jama and the Deputy Police Commissioner,
Gen. Zakia Mohamed attending the launch ceremony.
20. Soundbite: (English) Anita Kiki Gbeho, UN Secretary-General’s Deputy Special
Representative for Somalia
“The WiMS National Action Plan will help to ensure that women operating across the
maritime domain are provided increased visibility and opportunities to not only
participate in, but also benefit from, the sector.”
21. Med shot – Representatives of international partners at the launch ceremony.
22. Wide shot – Officials attending the launch ceremony.
23. Soundbite: (English) Anita Kiki Gbeho, UN Secretary-General’s Deputy Special
Representative for Somalia
“Opportunities are limitless in the maritime domain. With its vast coastline, Somalia’s
Blue Economy could be at the forefront of delivering change and generating wealth
for Somalia’s women and indeed for the nation.”
24. Wide shot – Foreign diplomats, as well as the Head of the European Union Delegation to
Somalia, Ambassador Tiina Intelmann, and the UN Secretary-General’s Deputy Special
Representative for Somalia, Anita Kiki Gbeho, at the ceremony.
25. Close- up shot – A participant listening during the ceremony.
26. Med shot – Participants at the ceremony.
27. Soundbite: (English) Amb. Tiina Intelmann, Head of the European Union Delegation to
Somalia
“This action plan takes a lead in ensuring that women are included in this area and
will contribute wider to gender equality in Somalia.”
28. Wide shot – The Minister of Women and Human Rights Development, Khadija Mohamed
Diriye speaking at the ceremony.
29. Med shot – The Minister of Ports and Marine Transport, Abdullahi Ahmed Jama;
Somalia’s Deputy Prime Minister Salah Ahmed Jama, and Somalia’s Police Deputy Police
Commissioner, Gen Zakia Mohamed.
30. Med shot – Participants at the ceremony.
31. Close-up shot – A maritime officer at the ceremony.
32. Soundbite: (Somali) Salah Ahmed Jama, Deputy Prime Minister of Somalia
“Organizations should work on empowering women. We are hoping that our donors
and partners will consider investing in women in this sector.”
33. Various close-up shots – Participant’s listening at the ceremony.
35. Wide shot – Participants attending the ceremony.
36. Soundbite: (English) Anita Kiki Gbeho, UN Secretary-General’s Deputy Special
Representative for Somalia
“The WiMS National Action Plan will help to ensure that women operating across the
maritime domain are provided increased visibility and opportunities to not only
participate in, but also benefit from, the sector.”
37. Wide shot – Officials listening to speeches during the ceremony.
38. Med shot – Somalia’s Deputy Ministers listening to speeches during the ceremony.
39. Med shot – A maritime officer listening to speeches during the ceremony.
40. Close-up shot – A participant listening.
41. Med shot – Participants listening to speeches during the ceremony.
42. Med shot – A maritime officer listening to speeches during the ceremony.
43. Close-up shot – An official attending the launch ceremony.
44. Close-up shot – Uganda’s Deputy Ambassador to Somalia, Nathan Mugisha, speaking at
the ceremony.
45. Close-up shot – An official speaking at the ceremony.
46. Wide shot – Officials leaving the venue at the end of the ceremony.

*****

New action plan launched to enhance Somali women’s role in Somalia’s maritime sector
Mogadishu, 15 February 2023 – A new national action plan for enhancing and empowering
Somali women in their country’s maritime sector was launched today at a high-level event
bringing together senior government officials and representatives from civil society and the
international community, including the United Nations.

“The ‘Blue Economy’ that we want to exploit includes fisheries from our waters and all the
goods that pass through it; we also have to consider the value chain from the fisherman, to the
buyer, to the marketer and to the investor. In order to succeed in this venture, we need to
empower women across the whole value chain,” Somalia’s Deputy Prime Minister, Salah
Ahmed Jama, said in his speech at the event to launch the Women in Maritime Sector (WiMS)
National Action Plan.
“I can assure you that if we put all our efforts and work towards empowering women, especially
in the ‘Blue Economy’ and around climate change, we will definitely have success,” he
continued.

“The WiMS National Action Plan will help to ensure that women operating across the maritime
domain are provided increased visibility and opportunities to not only participate in, but also
benefit from, the sector,” the UN Secretary-General’s Deputy Special Representative for
Somalia, Anita Kiki Gbeho, said in her remarks.

“Opportunities are limitless in the maritime domain. With its vast coastline, Somalia’s ‘Blue
Economy’ could be at the forefront of delivering change and generating wealth for Somalia’s
women and, indeed, for the nation,” added Ms. Gbeho, who also serves as the Officer-in-
Charge of the UN Assistance Mission in Somalia (UNSOM).

Others attending the launch included Somalia’s Minister of Women and Human Rights, Khadija
Diriye; its Minister of Ports and Marine Transport, Abdullahi Ahmed Jama; and the Head of
Delegation of the European Union, Ambassador Tiina Intelmann.

Plan’s culmination

The WiMS National Action Plan marks the culmination of a Somali-led process that began in
September 2019, with coordination and support from UNSOM and the European Union
Capacity Building Mission in Somalia (EUCAP Somalia).

“This Action Plan takes a lead in ensuring that women are included in this area and will
contribute wider to gender equality in Somalia,” Amb. Intelmann said in her remarks at the
launch.

With its key location along main international shipping routes, some 3,300 kilometres of
coastline and extensive sea-based resources, Somalia’s maritime domain is widely considered
as providing immense economic opportunities in the ‘Blue Economy.’
However, there is a critical shortage of maritime skills due to the lack of educational and
institutional capacity. Also, there remains a significant gender inequality which deprives Somali
women and girls of their basic rights and opportunities, including maritime education,
economic participation and access to financial resources.

The Action Plan, developed through an inclusive approach involving the Federal Government of
Somalia and the country’s Federal Member States, was designed to collectively develop
women’s needs and priorities in the maritime sector, within both the private sector and
government institutions.

Plan’s implementation

Those involved in developing the action plan over the past six years also include the Federal
Government of Somalia’s Ministries of Port and Maritime Transport, Women and Human Rights
Development, Fisheries and Blue Economy, Education, Labour, Internal Security, Justice and
Planning, as well as a range of corresponding ministries from the country’s Federal Member
State.

In their remarks, the Deputy Prime Minister and the UN Deputy Special Representative noted
the important role of international partners.

“Organizations should work on empowering women. We are hoping that our donors and
partners will consider investing in women in this sector,” Deputy Prime Minister Jama said.

The UN’s Ms. Gbeho emphasized that it was now crucial to transform the Action Plan into
projects that can be supported with technical and financial assistance.

In this respect, she also encouraged UN agencies such as the UN Office on Drugs and Crime
(UNODC), the UN Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), the UN Environment
Programme (UNEP), the International Labour Organization (ILO) and the Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) to continue their support.

“The collective commitment we are making jointly today in launching the WiMS National Action
Plan is of vital importance,” she said. “We need a gender responsive maritime domain, with
new procedures and structures that bring real change. We need a sector that recognizes and
promotes women’s willingness and agency to work in maritime, fisheries, mineral extraction
and law enforcement sectors.”

“The UN believes,” Ms. Gbeho continued, “an ocean of opportunities exist for Somalia to
explore; I can see its Women in Maritime are ready to be part of the exploration team.”

----Ends.

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