The Vietnamese Ministry of Labour, War Invalids and Social Affairs(MoLISA) and the Vietnamese Embassy in Japan co-organised a seminar onVietnam-Japan cooperation in human resources training in Tokyo onSeptember 14.
The event was part of the“Vietnam-Japan Meeting 2012”, which marks Vietnam’s National Dayand the establishment of the two countries’ bilateral diplomatic ties.
In his opening remark, Ambassador Doan Xuan Hungspoke highly of the potential for bilateral cooperation in traininghuman resources in Vietnam, which, he said, actively contributes tothe country’s industrialisation and modernisation.
He emphasised the urgent need for well-trained human resources,especially now that more Japanese businesses are boosting theirinvestment in Vietnam.
Deputy Minister NguyenNgoc Phi affirmed that Vietnam attaches importance to human resourcescooperation with Japan, adding that a project to develop Vietnam’suniversities and vocational training schools using Japan’s ODA hasshown the efficiency of that cooperation.
Japan, which boasts its competitive edge in human resources training, isactively boosting international cooperation in this field, said JapaneseMinister of Health, Labour and Social Welfare Seno Yoshihiro.
He highly valued the results of a Vietnam-Japan vocational trainingcooperation project which has been implemented at the Hanoi Universityof Industry since January 2010. The project has so far provided 350skilled workers.
According to the MoLISA,Vietnam has built its vocational training development strategy for the2011-2020 period, which sets a target of providing vocational trainingfor 23.5 million people by 2015, accounting for 40 percent of thecountry’s population. The figures will be 34.4 million and 55 percent by2020, respectively.-VNA
The event was part of the“Vietnam-Japan Meeting 2012”, which marks Vietnam’s National Dayand the establishment of the two countries’ bilateral diplomatic ties.
In his opening remark, Ambassador Doan Xuan Hungspoke highly of the potential for bilateral cooperation in traininghuman resources in Vietnam, which, he said, actively contributes tothe country’s industrialisation and modernisation.
He emphasised the urgent need for well-trained human resources,especially now that more Japanese businesses are boosting theirinvestment in Vietnam.
Deputy Minister NguyenNgoc Phi affirmed that Vietnam attaches importance to human resourcescooperation with Japan, adding that a project to develop Vietnam’suniversities and vocational training schools using Japan’s ODA hasshown the efficiency of that cooperation.
Japan, which boasts its competitive edge in human resources training, isactively boosting international cooperation in this field, said JapaneseMinister of Health, Labour and Social Welfare Seno Yoshihiro.
He highly valued the results of a Vietnam-Japan vocational trainingcooperation project which has been implemented at the Hanoi Universityof Industry since January 2010. The project has so far provided 350skilled workers.
According to the MoLISA,Vietnam has built its vocational training development strategy for the2011-2020 period, which sets a target of providing vocational trainingfor 23.5 million people by 2015, accounting for 40 percent of thecountry’s population. The figures will be 34.4 million and 55 percent by2020, respectively.-VNA