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Let’s make Vietnam a research nation: Swiss ambassador

Let’s make Vietnam a research nation: Swiss ambassador

Thursday, April 04, 2013, 14:00 GMT+7

Not only a representative of his homeland Switzerland in Vietnam, Ambassador Andrej Motyl is also an in-depth researcher of the renowned Swiss-Frenchman whose name is linked with Vietnam, scientist doctor Alexandre Yersin. “Let’s celebrate Alexandre Yersin by making Vietnam a research nation,” said Ambassador Motyl in an interview with Tuoi Tre.

I have a 13-year-old son. At this age, they start to ask: who do I want to be? You know, many of them want to become football players. So I said to him, “Son, you will starve because there are millions out there who play better than you.” [laugh] I really wish that young people in Vietnam looked at Yersin as an example to become a researcher or a scientist because this country has so much to offer.

What inspires you about doctor Yersin?

He is a beautiful figure and a hard-working person who found the meaning of his life through inventions and discoveries. He was ambitious in science and would never harm anyone. I am also impressed by how modest and humble the man was. Though a successful and wealthy scientist, Yersin still spent time showing movies, like the films by Charlie Chaplin, to kids in Nha Trang. He led a well-lived life and earned so many achievements, yet maintained his individualism and altruism.

You said in Da Lat that if young people there learn the spirit and attitude of Yersin, who was so interested in the unknown and  passionate for new things, then they will manage to make Da Lat a scientific research hub of Vietnam. Why?

In our embassy, we have pictures published by Vietnam’s Ministry of Agricultural and Rural Development on the wall. They present birds and shrimp and fish in Vietnam. The diversity in nature itself makes Vietnam one of the richest countries in the world, in my opinion. When talking about Yersin and diversity, a Vietnamese doctor comes to my mind: Doctor Tue Tinh. In a book by Robert Templer that I’ve got with me here in the office, Tue Tinh is said to have listed and come up with 3,800 remedies to cure 184 diseases with 630 southern herbs, some 700 years ago.

What I am telling you is, just by this variety, it’s a wonderful world for youngsters to discover a botanical area. Besides, I also believe your cuisine, with different herbs and vegetables, is so particular. We need to introduce that cuisine to the world with not only pho but also with 700 years of know-how  in using nature for our health and our food.

So, the link to Yersin here is, let’s shake up all Vietnamese and make this a research nation. You also have a Confucius background that makes you disciplined. So celebrate that. You don’t want to become Bangkok tomorrow because you will not. But if research becomes a strength and hobby of a typical Vietnamese, you will become a privileged nation in near future.

Why do you think such a research nation is not a reality yet, even though we have very good natural conditions?

A sense of planning is necessary in our system.  If you want to beat others today in steel production, good luck, because the global competition is so fierce today. You will have to use enormous quantities of coal, your environment will pay the price, and still your steel will not be competitive given the current global picture.  And then, the development will not be inclusive, and you will ignore your populations voice and needs. If we humans put everything on heavy industrialization, we will damage our forests and rivers. If we take all coal out of the ground without careful planning, then the air will be seriously polluted and thus, our health will be degraded with it.

So I think our dilemma has to do with this faith that industrialization brings you further immediately and that quick miraculous growth is possible.

We in the West also didn’t care about the environment: all the trees in the forests had to be straight and nice because you wanted to cut them easily. We had destroyed much of our diversity before we started to care about.  When I started my term here late 2011, it was the time Vietnam had lost its last Java rhino. Now it’s estimated that Vietnam has 20 to 30 tigers left but every two months, newspapers report that there is one in the fridge of somebody. Save your tigers and pangolins!

There is a faith of human in controlling the nature. But for the last 30 or 40 years, the Swiss have woken up. It seems to take took you longer. The debate in the press here is much more on proposals and less on implementation. Debates in my country’s medias can be less scientific and formal but are quicker in hearing voices from the grassroots. Possibly that’s the reason that our environmental policy is stronger than yours.

But I see the consciousness is increasing. The press is writing more and more about development issues of Vietnam. And it must be in the focus of the government because clearly the government has had a strong statement that rhino and ivory horns must not be traded.

If a Prime Minister makes such a particular statement it means he knows it’s serious and the government is paying much more attention. If you want to maintain this country as a beautiful place as it still is, if you want to have foreign tourists not only come once but come back again and again, you must save the beauty of the nature out there because though much has been damaged, so much can still be preserved.

We somehow need a big appeal to the nation that diversity is a wealth of Vietnam. That should be “No.1 Pride” You also have a diversity of tribes in the north, middle and south of the nation. Don’t look at it as a threat but celebrate it. I believe that young people should enjoy diversity instead of uniformity.

Of course, I do not say we should idolize Yersin. Just take him to remember that life is very full. And you can live according to your talents and discover and try. Let’s bring Vietnam to this thirst for discovery because competition will be on our brains and in education. Yersin, in my opinion, always wanted something that was useful. The link to the necessity of life is important. So in Vietnam, I think academia should talk to industries to see what types of graduates that Vietnam needs to promote its industry.

You must have heard about dual educational systems in Switzerland or Germany. For example, if you realize that 30% of young people can do the best academically, they can go into the academic world. Why push the rest to universities when they will be more successful if they get vocational training or training on the job? Yersin, to me, is an example of science in direct use to industries.

You are the one who proposed that Yersin be granted Vietnamese nationality. Why?

Yes, I went to the Ministry of Justice and asked them to give Yersin Vietnamese nationality. They said they will check if it is possible posthumously. Why do I want this? Yersin spent most of his life here. Every important discovery is from here. I’m saying he’s not only Swiss or French but most of all, he’s Vietnamese. That’d be helpful not only because he is a nice famous figure but one of your history.

The Swiss Embassy in Hanoi is supporting the making of a movie about the life of Alexandre Yersin with financial assistance from the Institute of Tropical Diseases in Basel, Switzerland.

In a broader context, the Embassy is bringing top experts from Switzerland to work with Vietnamese partners to find solutions for food safety, against the rise or return of rabies, to help fighting Hepatitis B or C and in Breast Cancer Prevention.

Other Swiss organizations and companies are also in Vietnam in a wide range of areas, from supporting a distribution system of medicaments into isolated villages, teaching farmers the state-of-the-art use of water to helping banks prevent future non performing loans.

Huong Giang

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