Speaking at the opening ceremony, the Registrar General, Richard Kayibanda, said:
“We are honored to receive the first regional workshop in patent matters that brings together a high number of representatives of intellectual property offices, members of WIPO and the African Regional Intellectual Property Organization. This demonstrates the importance of intellectual property in our respective countries and our commitment to take advantage of available tools to spur scientific development and innovation.
Rwanda’s Vision 2020 highlights human resource development and a knowledge-based economy as one of its six priorities. To build a knowledge-based economy, intellectual property protection is central to converting knowledge, information, and ideas into tradable intellectual property assets, ensuring that the national economy continues to thrive,” Kayibanda concluded.
Rwanda joined the Patent Cooperation Treaty and Harare Protocol in 2011. Since the accession to these instruments, the number of patent and utility models applications in Rwanda has increased from 48 in 2016 to 162 in 2017 and 409 this year.
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