Ghana becomes new Member of WorldSkills
Ghana
joins WorldSkills
Joins
as the 81st Member!
Global
mission to bring the power of
Skills
to young people across the world
“It
is with a great pleasure that we announce Ghana as the 81st Member of
WorldSkills International. Ghana was one of six countries to take part in the
first WorldSkills Africa Competition in Kigali last year, winning five medals
in the Rwandan capital, including gold for Cooking and silver in Hairdressing
and Electrical Wiring.
It
was introduced to the WorldSkills movement following a UNESCO conference in
China and confirmed its intention to join after visiting WorldSkills Abu Dhabi
2017” said WorldSkills International officially. Ghana joins in time for
WorldSkills Kazan 2019 and will also be taking part in its first General
Assembly in Russia. It becomes the seventh African country to join WorldSkills
and the first from West Africa.
Speaking
recently, Dr Fred Kyel Asamoah, the Executive Director of Ghana’s Council for
Technical and Vocational Education and Training (COTVET), said “The country’s
aim is to be a center of excellence for technical and vocational education and
training.” “Our membership at the WorldSkills International will mean that we
will be competing with all the youth in the world about the latest or current
skills that is in the world so that we don’t just fall behind,” he said.
“Being
a member of WorldSkills means that Ghana will be competing not only within
Ghana or Africa but competitive on the job market as far as the world is
concerned.” With a population of around 30 million, Ghana is a West African
country with roots that go back to the Middle Ages and the 17th Century Ashanti
Empire.
Formally
known as the Gold Coast it declared independence from Britain in 1957, and is
now a member of the African Union, the Non-Aligned Movement and the
Commonwealth of Nations.
It
is the world’s second largest producer of cocoa, with substantial reserves of
oil and gold. The country also developed Africa’s first mobile phone network in
1992. Over 95 per cent of Ghana’s children attend school, one of the highest
rates in Africa.
“We
are delighted to welcome Ghana as the 81st Member of WorldSkills and look
forward to their participation in WorldSkills Kazan 2019,” said Simon Bartley,
WorldSkills President. “This is another important milestone in the expansion of
our global mission to bring the power of skills to young people across the
world, and in particular to Africa and the developing world through our Vision
2025.”
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