Chinese, UN officials urge better vocational education

ADDIS ABABA. — Chinese and United Nations officials have called for advancing vocational education and talent development programs in Africa to speed up industrialisation and continental transformation.

They made the call this week at the opening of a seminar on vocational education management and capacity-building for the Luban Workshop in Addis Ababa, the capital of Ethiopia.

Jiang Feng, head of the Chinese Mission to the African Union (AU), said China was committed to building a vocational education development community in Africa through various skill development training programs.

“The training seminar initiated today is a practical measure to implement the commitments within the framework of the China-Africa-UN Tripartite Cooperation Demonstration Centre,” he said. “It focuses on the demand for skilled talents in the industrialisation process of Africa, and deeply connects with the AU Agenda 2063.”

Highlighting that China had implemented thousands of training programmes, including overseas ones for fellow African people, Jiang said that China-Africa cooperation, especially in the areas of industrialisation, agricultural modernisation, and talent cultivation, is gaining momentum.

He recalled that China has launched 17 cooperation programmes in Africa related to governance, industrial promotion, infrastructure connectivity, trade facilitation, green development, capacity-building, health, cultural exchanges, and peace and security.

Asegid Adane Mebratu, national program officer at the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO), Ethiopia, emphasised the need to promote vocational education in Africa to sustainably meet the evolving needs of industries and communities in the continent.

“The Luban workshop represents a practical effort to enhance technical skills development and promote technology exchange in support of industrial upgrading and talent cultivation in Africa,” Mebratu said, noting that the seminar  part of the broader commitment to strengthening the China-Africa-UNIDO Centre of Excellence.

Earlier this year, the AU adopted African Continental Technical and Vocational Education and Training Strategy 2025-34, a blueprint to reimagine skills development systems aligned with Africa’s labour market and industrialization priorities.

According to the AU, each year, 10 million to 12 million young people enter Africa’s job market, while only about 3 million formal wage jobs are created, resulting in structural under-employment and informality.

In 2025, about 121 million African youth aged 15 to 35 are either unemployed or classified as “Not in Education, Employment, or Training NEET,” it said. — Xinhua

Related Posts

Ending fistula, restoring dignity

Disability Issues Dr Christine Peta FOR thousands of women and girls across Africa, Asia and beyond, obstetric fistula is not just a medical complication, it is a profound social and…

UK pledges to support Zim in UNSC

Zvamaida Murwira Senior Reporter THE United Kingdom has pledged to work with Zimbabwe when it takes up its United Nations Security Council non-permanent seat that it overwhelmingly won early this…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

×
×