Science and Technologhy Minister, Peter Daka, has appealed to mining companies and other private sector organisations on the Copperbelt to form synergies with training institutions under his ministry to ensure that students graduating from these colleges were relevant to the manpower needs of these companies.
Mr. Daka said Government has observed that most of the people that were being trained under the Technical Education Vocational and Entrepreneurship Training programme were getting obsolete skills which has proved to be irrelevant to the skills needed by most mining companies and the private sector.
Mr. Daka said this in Kitwe today during the official opening of a one-day National Stakeholders Consultative forum held at Edinburgh Hotel today under the theme “Unlocking Human Resource Potential to achieve Economic Growth.”
He said there is urgent need for the private sector to design programmes that would assist government provide adequate training in line with moving technology to ensure that the youths graduating from these colleges contribute to national development.
He also appealed to the private sector to offer employment to the graduates to ensure that they contribute to wealth creation.
And speaking earlier at the same function, Science and Technology Permanent Secretary, Buleti Nsemukila, said half of Zambia’s population were youths below the age of 15, which has a big base of people needing relevant skills training in order for them to become economically viable.
Dr. Semukila said the majority of Zambia’s population were young people who needed skills to enable them crate wealth and alleviate poverty.
He said there was need to train more people with different skills if the number of people working in the informal sector was to be reduced.
And in a paper titled Unlocking Human Resource Potential to achieve Economic Growth, Chairperson for the Private Sector Development Association, Yusf Dodia, called on training institutions in Zambia to redevelop the use of education infrastructure to ensure that more people acquired relevant skills for wealth creation.
Mr. Dodia observed that in Zambia, most training institutions were failing to use their facilities to train more people, hence the utilisation of these facilities for social functions such as church services, weddings and kitchen parties.
He said wealth creation was related to the quality of manpower a country has, hence the need for these training institutions to enroll more students and utilise the idle facilities.
ZAMIS/ENDS/LK/CMM/EB.