Daboya (N/R), Jan 11, – The North
Gonja District Assembly has taken steps to find more market for smocks woven in
the area by tasking the country’s High Commissioners and Ambassadors to promote
smocks in their countries of assignment.
To this end, the Assembly has
supplied few smocks to some of the High Commissioners and Ambassadors to
occasionally wear them to events to attract market for the product abroad.
Mr Adam Eliasu Red-bawa, District
Chief Executive for North Gonja announced this in an interview with the Ghana
News Agency at Daboya on Wednesday to specify efforts being made to promote the
smock industry in the district.
Smock (batakari) weaving is a
major economic activity at Daboya, the capital of the North Gonja District in
the Northern.
The town is noted for beautiful
quality smocks, but rising cost of production materials and dwindling market
for smocks have become a concern for industry players in the area.
In 2016, the Savannah Accelerated
Development Authority in collaboration with the Ministry of Trade and Industry,
declared that smocks be worn on the first Friday of every month to boost the
patronage of and step up the international appeal and reach of smocks thereby
boosting employment and incomes of the large number of people the industry
employed.
Mr Red-bawa said “I have also
proposed to the High Commissioners and Ambassadors to organise exhibitions of
smocks as part of their activities for the assembly to select some of the major
smock dealers to attend and showcase the products to the outside world.”
He expressed the hope that the
High Commissioners and Ambassadors would soon kick-start the process to enable
the Assembly to showcase smocks to the outside world.
Mr Red-bawa said the Assembly had
also partnered a private investor to establish a factory in the area as part of
the One-District One-Factory programme to produce yarn for smock weavers in the
area as part of efforts to reduce the production cost of smocks.
He said farmers in the district
would be engaged to cultivate cotton to feed the factory to ensure success and
was hopeful that efforts being made would soon materialise into establishing
the factory for the benefit of the people in the area.
GNA

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