December 17, 2016 | 20:11 (GMT+7)
Seminar discusses job creation for people with disabilities
A seminar discussing experience in generating jobs for people with disabilities in Vietnam and the Republic of Korea (RoK) opened in Hanoi on December 16.
According to the National Committee for Persons with Disabilities (NCPD), Vietnam currently records nearly 7 million people aged five and above living with disabilities, or nearly 7.8 percent of the population.
Up to 61 percent of them are in working age but a few earn modest income by working in agro-forestry-fisheries.
More than 41 percent of the disabled aged above six are illiterate while 19.5 percent graduated from secondary schools or above.
Thousands of people with disabilities have been trained in 256 vocational training facilities in 56 cities and provinces and given jobs through the national support programs.
Vice President of the Korean Society for Rehabilitation of Persons with Disabilities (KSRPD) Na Woon-hwan said the Republic of Korea (RoK) has referred to the US, UK and Japan’s policies when it comes to policy-making, adding that the country has ensured basic labor rights of people with disabilities.
The RoK has ruled that 3 percent of the employees in each state and public organization must be people with disabilities and any discrimination against them is banned, he said.
At the event, participants also shared business models that offer support to the vulnerable, among others.
The seminar was co-hosted by the NCPD, the KSRPD and the Korea International Cooperation Agency.
Source: VNA