Special
Report: Hu Jintao visits 4 Asian nations,
attends APEC Meeting
HANOI, Nov. 16 (Xinhua) -- Ministers and
representatives from the 21-member Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) have
encouraged the development of human resources, industrial science and
technology, and small and medium enterprises, to strengthen economic and
technical cooperation in the region.
Under a joint statement issued on Thursday at the
conclusion of the two-day 18th APEC Ministerial Meeting, they reaffirmed the
pivotal role of human resources development for sustainable development and
prosperity.
The delegates at the meeting encouraged the Human
Resources Development Working Group in education, employment, labor and capacity
building among the economies to continue working on the initiative of
"Developing a Strategic Plan for English and Other Language Learning in the APEC
region."
Regarding industrial science and technology, they
welcomed the improvements in the participation of women and ethnic minority
communities in science and technology.
The ministers also stressed the importance of
strengthening small and medium enterprises' competitiveness for trade and
investment through developing and enabling environment.
They encouraged efforts to support the use of
information and communication technology in small and medium enterprises and
micro ones in promoting trade and exploring business opportunities, especially
in overseas markets.
At the meeting, they also reached consensus on some
other important issues such as continuing the support for the World Trade
Organization (WTO) negotiations, facilitating trade in the region, enhancing
anti-corruption and transparency, and strengthening human security.
Documents endorsed by the ministers and
representatives will be submitted to the APEC economic leaders for approval at
their meeting on Nov. 18-19.
Founded in 1989, APEC is a major regional forum
acting as the primary regional vehicle for promoting open trade and practical
economic and technical cooperation in the Asia-Pacific region.
It represents the most economically dynamic region in
the world, with its 21 member economies accounting for more than one third of
the world's population, approximately 60 percent of world GDP, about 47 percent
of world trade.