Carlos Morel
The rationale for this statement of resolutions to be adopted
by the conference is as follows.
A statement made at the emergence of a field (in this case, developing
country application of bioinformatics to pressing problems, networking
between north and south bioinformatics groups, and the emerging discipline
of bioinformatics itself) can often have a supportive effect on members and
developers of the field. Resolutions made can be submitted to governments,
societies, universities, city managements and company executives to help
support the development of infrastructure, training, and networking/travel
between members of the group. It can also have an impact on development and
awareness of the existing groups through the press, enabling further
development of bioinformatics in countries where the discipline is likely to
have a powerful leveraged effect - an aim of the InCoB meeting.
To that end, the panelists of the Mini-Symposium have put
together a set of draft resolutions at the Bangkok meeting set out
below. These draft resolutions have been slightly amended based on
feedback from the panelists.
In view of the effort by the panelists, the APBioNet ExCo has
decided to endorse their work and to adopt these Bangkok resolutions
for APBioNet as a whole. The draft document was circulated to
all APBioNet members for rough consensus on 1 May 2002.
After slight modifications based on positive feedback, and the absence
of any objections, the APBioNet ExCo hereby adopts the
following resolutions for APBioNet as the "APBioNet Bangkok Resolutions".
APBioNet Bangkok Resolutions (from the InCOB 2002 Bangkok Resolutions)
The APBioNet hereby endorses the work of the InCoB Conference
on the Bangkok Resolutions, and adopts the Bangkok Resolutions
for the APBioNet.
Pursuant to the fact that the InCoB conference,
comprising the international panel of
distinguished keynote and plenary speakers,
participants and the organisers, and
delegates from more than 20 countries, and
from 6 international organisations
having had several days of intensive talks, meeting sessions and
interactions in Bangkok, and
having discussed key issues related to Bioinformatics in the
North-South Networking MiniSymposium,
did hereby declare that
in view of
the enormous amount of resources and funding invested in Biotechnology
over the past two decades, and
the concurrent rapid development of a new generation of
skills and technologies in fields broadly classified as or
associated with Bioinformatics,
and did recognise the crucial and urgent need to enhance the
integration and utilisation of Bioinformatics in
biotechnology and bioscientific endeavour,
such that our life scientists in our respective domains,
shall be well equipped to carry out tomorrow's research.
and
pursuant to this recognition, we, members of the Asia Pacific
bioinformatics community such as is represented in the
membership of the Asia Pacific Bioinformatics Network,
do hereby make the following resolutions based on
rough consensus achieved during May 2002:
Resolution 1 Bioinformatics Integration
We hereby resolve to take the necessary proactive steps in our
respective areas of responsibility and spheres of influence,
from the highest levels of governance and policy making
to the lowest level of implementation,
to ensure the full integration of enabling bioinformatics techniques
and technologies into biotechnology, healthcare and life sciences.
Resolution 2 Bioinformatics Cooperation
Taking cognizance of our respective areas of skills, competence and excellence,
we hereby resolve to identify specific areas of bioinformatics cooperation
in which we can synergise our strengths and
complement and compensate for our weaknesses.
These areas of cooperation can include the creative involvement and
the intelligent use of bioinformatics and all its allied disciplines
in the domains of
Agriculture, Medicine, Environmental Sciences, BioDiversity and
Natural Products, Drug Discovery and Traditional Cures among others.
Resolution 3 Information and Software Sharing
In recognition that no one group can have full ownership and access
to the whole spectrum of bioinformatics resources and technologies, and
in order to optimise limited resources,
we resolve to participate in aspects of information and software sharing,
from the awareness of grant, funding and other opportunities to
open source software and publicly accessible databases, and the
intellectual properties arising therefrom.
Resolution 4 Building Bioinformatics Infrastructure
In full recognition that there is a wide discrepancy in the levels
of accessible computational resources in our midst, particularly between
the haves and have-nots,
we strongly resolve to build a
shared bioinformatics computational infrastructure,
from the underlying advanced networking framework
to computational hardware resources
through a full cooperative programmatic effort of
the bioinformatics community,
North-South,
South-South,
East-West,
with other related groups,
international organisations and
with industry
Resolution 5 Human Resource Development
As a result of the InCoB Inaugural conference 2002,
we recognise many pockets of
bioinformatics research excellence scattered in our respective
locations and elsewhere.
We also recognise the rapidly increasing level of interest in bioinformatics
amongst our communities.
We hereby resolve to reinforce and expand these areas of expertise
through systematic and institutionalised human resource development,
technical training, scientific exchanges, outreach and awareness
at all levels of scientific manpower, including
scientific policy makers and other decision makers.
Signed by on behalf of the conference
Yongyuth Yuthavong, Thailand
Prasit Palittapongarnpim, Thailand (BioTec)
Tan Tin Wee, Singapore (APBioNet)
Phil Bourne, USA (ISCB)
Supa Hannongbua, Thailand
Shoba Ranganathan, Singapore (APBioNet)
Tim Hubbard, UK (Sanger)
Winston Hide, South Africa (SANBI, African Bioinformatics Network, ISCB, EMBnet)
Carlos Morel, Brazil (WHO)
Julio Collado, Mexico
Endorsed and adopted by the Asia Pacific Bioinformatics Network
On Behalf of the Membership of APBioNet
signed
S.Subbiah, President, APBioNet
Shoba Ranganathan, Vice-President, APBioNet
Tan Tin Wee, Secretariat, APBioNet
Due Process: