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Empowering African Veterinarians The MGVP aims to employ outstanding African veterinarians and mentor the next generation of wildlife health experts. To do so, we sponsor educational programs at African schools and universities and continuing education for our staff members. By investing in training we are ultimately envisioning the time when in-country veterinarians will be the primary providers of mountain gorilla veterinary care. Read on to learn about these efforts. Makerere University
Currently, we are working to transform WARM into a fully-fledged disease surveillance department thanks to funding from the UC Davis PREDICT program, the Mountain Gorilla Conservation Fund, and Canadian Friends of MGVP. We are renovating a large animal facility to add new laboratories, office space, and a modernized lecture hall, as well as installing the region’s first wildlife bio bank. With these new and improved facilities, students, veterinarians, and other scientists will be able to process, analyze, and store biological samples collected during disease outbreak investigations. Other Universities The MGVP accepts interns and volunteers enrolled in veterinary medicine or animal resource management degree programs at African universities to work on projects in Rwanda. Students gain valuable field and laboratory skills that can help them secure good jobs after graduation. The MGVP has been able to hire several former interns, including Drs. Jean Bosco Noheli and Olivier Nsengimana. MGVP is currently seeking funding to help upgrade the veterinary schools at the University of Lubumbashi in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Umutara Polytechnic University in Rwanda. Rwandan Primary Schools
Continuing Education for Staff The MGVP funds employees seeking to refine their skills and learn new techniques through attendance at workshops, conferences, graduate programs, and other educational opportunities. This past year, Dr. Jean Bosco Noheli trained at the Indianapolis and Maryland Zoos in February, while Dr. Eddy Kambale spent the month of July working at the California National Primate Research Center at UC Davis. In November, Dr. Jean-Felix Kinani completed his Masters of Field Epidemiology at the National University of Rwanda. |

Since 1996, the MGVP has partnered with
Several of his former students, including Dr. Benard Ssebide, Dr. Julius Nziza, Dr. Fred Nizeyimana, and Dr. Rachael Mbabazi, are now full-time MGVP employees. JBN helped other veterinary school graduates to create the Uganda Wildlife Veterinary Network, an association designed to promote research, conservation, partnerships and excellence among veterinarians in Uganda.
The MGVP collaborates with the non-profit organization