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Iraqis Reopen Vocational School in Baghdad
FrontLines - May 2009
By Ashtar Analeed Marcus
BAGHDAD, Iraq—A vocational
school for 700 students
has reopened in Baghdad with
USAID assistance.
The Mada’in District Council
reopened Salman Pak Industrial
School March 24.
The school aims to improve
business and job skills through
classes in sewing, generator
maintenance, welding, automotive
repair, plumbing, electrical
installation, masonry, and
carpentry.
Iraqi officials called the renovation
of Salman Pak Industrial
School an important community
priority, after insurgent attacks
destroyed much of the building.
Short-term jobs for unemployed
laborers and long-term
jobs for the staff were created
by the school’s construction.
The Iraqi Ministry of Education
(MoE) and the Mada’in District
Council worked with USAID’s
Provincial Reconstruction Team
representative, U.S. military,
and local security officials to
complete the project.
“The reopening of the school
will provide Iraqis with useful
skills in a competitive job market
and local employers with a
qualified labor force that
increases their productivity,”
USAID’s Director in Iraq,
Christopher D. Crowley, said.
The MoE offers technical and
vocational training in the last
three years of secondary education.
There are 154 industrial
vocational education schools in
Iraq, according to the ministry.
USAID invested $600,000 in
the project as a part of its country-
wide efforts to help create
an environment for stability and establish the conditions for
long-term development to take
hold in violence-affected areas.
The Iraqi government
contributed $58,000 in labor and
in cleanup and disposal. The
MoE will continue to maintain
the building grounds, provide
full-time security, and retain
qualified teachers.
★
FrontLines is published
by the Bureau for Legislative and Public Affairs
U.S. Agency for International Development
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