UNITED NATIONS, May 20 (Xinhua) -- The United Nations World Intellectual
Property Organization (WIPO) Tuesday launched a program to help indigenous
communities to manage their intellectual property.
The Maasai community of Laikipia in Kenya will be the first to benefit from
the program, as it was because of calls from the Maasai community the UN group
decided to start such a project.
Two people from the Maasai community will travel with an expert from the
National Museums of Kenya to the United States for intensive, hands-on training
in documentary techniques and archival skills, said WIPO.
"Our goal is to empower tradition-bearers to preserve and pass on their own
traditional cultures if they wish to do so while safeguarding their intellectual
property rights and interests," said Francis Gurry, Deputy Director General of
WIPO.
New technologies will provide communities with fresh opportunities to
document and digitize expressions of their traditional culture, said the
official.
WIPO will also provide the Maasai people with a basic kit of field
equipment, computers and software for their own use when they return to Kenya,
he said.