Special Report: Xinhua journalists cover Africa
BEIJING, Oct. 18 (Xinhua) -- China has established
educational exchanges and cooperatiove relations with more than 50 African
countries, the Ministry of Education (MOE) said here Wednesday.
Cen Jianjun, deputy director of the ministry's
international cooperation office, said at a news briefing on the upcoming
China-Africa Cooperation Forum that efforts put into Sino-African educational
exchanges and cooperation in recent years had paid off.
China committed to running training programs for
1,000 African government officials, school heads and teachers over a period of
three years according to the Beijing Declaration signed at the Sino-African
Education Minister Forum held here last November.
"We have met our commitments to date," Cen said.
China provides about 1,200 government scholarships to
African students every year. Chinese State Councilor Chen Zhili earlier promised
to double the number in five years.
By the end of 2005, a total of 18,919 scholarships
had been granted to students from 50 African countries, MOE figures show.
China has also set up six non-profit Confucius
Institutes in six African countries to teach Chinese language and culture.
So far, through nearly 60 assistance programs, China
has helped25 African countries to develop neglected disciplines and train
science and technological talents.
China has also dispatched 530 professional teachers
to 35 African countries to assist them in developing higher and middle school
education, according to Cen.
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the
inauguration of diplomatic relations between the People's Republic of China and
African countries. Of the 53 African countries, 48 countries have established
diplomatic ties with China.
The third ministerial meeting of the China-Africa
Cooperation Forum will be held from Nov. 3-5 in Beijing. The summit will focus
on "friendship, peace, cooperation and development." Enditem
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