The Minister of Science, Technology and Higher Education, Daniel Nivagara, who is visiting Rwanda, recently met in Kigali, at the Mozambican High Commission in Rwanda, with representatives of the Mozambican student community undergoing training in that country.
During the meeting, the students evaluated the training process, the experiences, and the good practices gathered, as well as the challenges faced.
The vast majority of Mozambican students currently undergoing training in Rwanda are scholarship holders of the Partnership for Applied Sciences, Engineering, and Technologies (PASET) program, a pan-African initiative aimed at strengthening research and innovation capacity in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM), improving the quality of higher education and strengthening research capacity.
On the occasion, the Mozambican official urged students to master Science and Technology as a resource to solve concrete problems that affect communities.
According to a statement sent to our editorial office, the director also encouraged students to promote, at various levels, the creation of networks of African scientists, starting with the creation, in the country, of internal work and research networks.
In this perspective, the minister considered it important to maximize the scarce resources available in the country in order to generate competitive products, services, and technologies in the current digital economy market, having also encouraged students to be persistent in their respective areas of research, however, the enormous challenges they may face in the training process.
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