VietNamNet Bridge - To come to a decision to allow RMIT to
enter Vietnam, the government then had a great political determination before
the reservation and worry of a country that began to open up.
One day in the early October 2008
in Ho Chi Minh City, President Nguyen Minh Triet received Michael Maan, General
Director of RMIT – the largest public university of Australia.
The Vietnamese President
mentioned the "iconic works" in the relations of friendship and
cooperation between the two countries: the My Thuan Bridge and the RMIT University
Vietnam.
The two "icons" are
known very well by Michael Maan, former Australian Ambassador to Vietnam.
My Thuan Bridge
My Thuan Bridge is considered the
project that marks the beginning of Australia’s grant of official development
assistance (ODA) at the government level to Vietnam in the early 1990s.
13 years ago, the two sides
started this project. At that time, starting from the project to build
"friendship bridges on the Mekong River" connecting Laos and
Thailand, the Vietnamese government called for Canberra to help build the My
Thuan Bridge.
This project was committed by the
administration of Prime Minister Paul Keating in 1994 but then it had trouble
under the ruling of the Liberal Party. It was not a priority project. The
construction of this project was stopped for the time and it was then continued
thanks to the efforts from both sides.
In 2000, the bridge was opened.
My Thuan becomes an important backbone linking the Mekong Delta region and
other regions. Mr. Michael Maan was on the bridge on the inauguration day 13
years ago.
Just a year after the bridge was
put into use, the income of the people on both sides of the river increased 30
percent. According to the Australian Agency for International Development
(AusAID), to date, every year this bridge serves more than 5 million vehicles.
On the occasion of the 40th
anniversary of diplomatic ties of Vietnam-Australia this year, a new ODA bridge
project funded by Australia is expected to be launched. That is the Cao Lanh
bridge project in Dong Thap Province, with the aid of 160 million Australian
dollars, to connect the Mekong Delta region with the rest of the Southeast Asia
and beyond.
According to Mr. Layton Pike,
Assistant to Director-General of Ausaid on international development, this will
be the biggest aid project of the Australian government in the Greater Mekong
sub-region.
The first international university
For RMIT, the first international
university with 100% foreign investment capital in Vietnam, Mr. Michael Mann is
probably one of the people who most thoroughly understand the development
process of this project, from the zero in 1998.
Professor Margaret Gardner, Vice
President of the University Council, the director of RMIT University said that
some people said that Mr. Maan and the board of directors of RMIT were
"crazy" when starting it like that.
"We had to start it with
zeros, especially the zero on the legal framework for the establishment of an
international higher education institution with 100% foreign capital," Prof.
Gardner said.
To come to a decision to allow
RMIT to enter Vietnam, the government then had to have great political
determination before reservations, fears of a country that began to open up.
Professor Peter Coloe is a close
colleague of Michael Mann in establishing RMIT in Vietnam and has worked
related to the research and teaching in Vietnam for the past 10 years. Mr.
Coloe said: "We have received huge political support of the government of
Vietnam."
Since 1998 when they formally
received the invitation from Vietnam to the year 2000, they had the first
educational institution in Ho Chi Minh City. Michael Mann led RMIT Vietnam in
the first years of establishment, laid the solid foundation for the development
of the university, especially the close relationship with the government of
Vietnam.
At present, the university has
6,000 students, with training facilities in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City and
becomes the Asian branch in the development strategy of RMIT. Not to mention,
RMIT Melbourne also has many Vietnamese students and has trained a large volume
of civil servants for Vietnam.
Before the lunar New Year 2013,
Mai Linh, 20, a third-year student of RMIT Vietnam, received good news when she
was admitted to work part-time for Ernst & Young.
"I was the last person in
the class who acquired a part-time job," Ling said.
Duc, who graduated two years ago,
has worked for several large private companies. He even held the position of
department manager. Duc also refused the opportunity to work for HSBC before
becoming an officer of the Trade Promotion Department of the Ministry of
Industry and Trade.
"I thought I was equipped
with very good knowledge. After working for some private companies, I want to
work for the public sector, where needs the staff with professional
knowledge," Duc said.
The story of Australia's
education exports to Vietnam is not only in one direction. In the early 1990s,
Vietnamese students started to go to Australia.
At that time, Vietnamese
students’ foreign language proficiency was not good as today but they were
accepted to study in Australia.
But by the late 1990s, when the
two countries had the first agreements on educational cooperation, the element
of "competitiveness” was placed on top to ensure opportunities for many Vietnamese
students studying in Australia, both self-funding and getting scholarships.
Vietnam now ranks fourth in the
group of countries with the largest students studying in Australia, with 22,360
people.
Australia is one of the leading
countries that are chosen by Vietnamese agencies and ministries to send their
staff to training.
A generation of Vietnamese who
are trained in Australia is formed.
Xuan Linh
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