Vietnamese students graduated from agricultural courses in Israel
A graduation ceremony has been recently held for 50 Vietnamese students who attended the International Course for Agriculture from 2016-2017 at Sedrot Negev Agriculture Centre in northern Israel.
Tel Aviv (VNA) – A graduation ceremony has beenrecently held for over 150 Vietnamese and Nepalese students who attended theInternational Course for Agriculture from 2016-2017 at Sedrot Negev AgricultureCentre (SNAC) in northern Israel.
Speaking at the event on July 6, said the course is exclusively designed for students from Asian countries,including Southeast Asia, and out of more than 150 graduates this year, about50 come from Vietnam.
The centre looks forwards to more Vietnamese studentsenrolling its courses as they are very dynamic and creative, he noted, addingthat a Vietnamese graduate plans to pursue a master degree in agriculture atBengurion University.
Khuat Van Quyen from the Embassy of Vietnam in Israelurged the Vietnamese graduates to work harder to learn more from Israel’s hightechnology and advanced management in agriculture so that they can contributeto Vietnam’s agricultural development when returning home.
Besides SNAC, there are three more centres in Israelinviting Vietnamese students to enroll in their agricultural programmes – AICATArava, Ramat Negev, and Agrostudies.-VNA
The Vietnam Cooperative Alliance (VCA)’s Cooperative Union of Agricultural Consumption have reached with Israeli partners a deal to develop a supply chain of clean agricultural products.
The Israeli Embassy and CARE International in Vietnam will assist farmers in the northern mountainous province of Dien Bien in growing vegetables in greenhouses.
Deputy Prime Minister Vuong Dinh Hue has affirmed that Vietnam always opens doors for Israeli businesses and supports them to access its 90-million strong market, over-600-million ASEAN market, and other countries that have established trade ties with Vietnam.
Chairman of the Ho Chi Minh City People’s Committee Nguyen Thanh Phong has committed to keeping partnering with Israeli firms operating in the city to improve its business climate.
With strong support from local authorities, businesses, organisations, and residents, the province has successfully built or repaired 10,707 homes for disadvantaged households, including war veterans, families of martyrs, ethnic minority people, and low-income residents.
Throughout its resistance against colonialists and imperialists, Vietnam developed a revolutionary press that has served as a benchmark for just and legitimate causes worldwide.
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PM Chinh lauded the press’s historic role in the nation’s fight for independence and its ongoing process of national development, affirming that the Government always highly appreciates the close partnership and steadfast support of press agencies and journalists nationwide.
In recent decades, Vietnam’s mainstream media has become a reliable and persuasive channel for showcasing the nation’s development policies and achievements, especially in economic matters, according to a senior assistant editor at the Times of India.
A hub for sharing best practices, the event aims to forge solutions for financial sustainability, public media contracts, audience engagement, content innovation, and newsroom restructuring. It is also a moment for Vietnam’s media to accelerate its progress and figure out what the “revolutionary press” means in a new era.
From “Thanh nien”, Vietnam’s first revolutionary newspaper founded by Nguyen Ai Quoc (later President Ho Chi Minh) on June 21, 1925, the revolutionary press has remained devoted to its sacred missions -accompanying the nation, serving the Fatherland, and working for the people.
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Bernama CEO Datin Paduka Nur-ul Afida Kamaludin said VNA has been a consistent and reliable partner in OANA, contributing actively to the regional media landscape through content sharing, coordination, and policy discussions. Their coverage of ASEAN and Indochina issues adds valuable perspectives. Bernama appreciates the collaboration with VNA.
In this era of global integration and digitalisation, the press must adopt modern multimedia models to not only meet increasing information and communication demands but also align with the broader socio-economic development of the country.
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