By: V.P. Sujata
Source:
The StarMalaysia hopes to reach a comprehensive agreement with South Korea on mutual assistance in education by the end of the year.
Deputy
Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin said the Memorandum of
Understanding would cover curriculum, teachers’ education, vocational
and technical sectors, and sports and ICT in schools.
“South Korea on the other hand could send its students to learn English in Malaysia,” he added.
He
said Education Ministry officials would have to discuss the matter
thoroughly and prepare the MoU in time for South Korean president Lee
Myung-Bak’s official visit to Kuala Lumpur by year’s end.
Muhyiddin,
who paid a courtesy call on South Korean Prime Minister Chung Un Chan
yesterday afternoon, said the proposed agreement was received positively
by the premier.
During the meeting, Muhyiddin thanked the prime
minister for allowing Malaysian students to study in South Korea under
the Look East policy as well as offering them scholarships.
Muhyiddin,
who also met captains of industry during his four-day visit to South
Korea, said investment pledges received by the Malaysian Investment
Development Authority from 15 conglomerates totalled RM3.8bil.
These, he said, included new investors as well as existing ones interested in expanding their businesses in Malaysia.
The
investors had expressed interest in fields like green technology, oil
refinery, shipbuilding, electric vehicles, food and beverages, defence
equipment, as well as plans to open overseas headquarters and regional
establishments in Malaysia, he said.
One of the conglomerates,
said Muhyiddin, was Samsung Group which had expressed interest in solar
energy, light-emitting diodes (LED), defence equipment and shipbuilding.
“The
competition for foreign investment is now stiff, so we have to work
hard,” he told reporters after the courtesy call on Chung and an earlier
visit to Samsung City in Suwon, about 50km from here yesterday.
He was briefed by Samsung Group Malaysia president Datuk Lee Sang-Bai on their plans in Malaysia over the next five years.
Lee,
who is also chairman of the Korean Chamber of Commerce Malaysia,
described Malaysia as a country located in the “centre” and was the best
place to invest in.