Emmigration of Elites Has Become a Challenge for Islamic Countries
Date: 6/3/2007
TUMS Public Relations News Service: WHO director in Iran speaking in the enclosing ceremony of CDFMIC warned about the importance of this elites' emigration challange particularly for the highly skilled physicians and asked every Isalmic countries to search for more effective solutions for this situation.
Dr. Mobasher Al-sheykh WHO ambassador to Islamic Republic of Iran in his lecture at the enclosing ceremony of the first international conference of deans of medical faculties of Islamic countries that was attended by 23 countries, expressed his special thanks to Dr. Larijani and his colleagues in TUMS who initiated this conference to pave the way for a better extensive scientific collaboration among Islamic countries.
He said in a part of his speech :During last several decades we observed a constant challenge among developing countries (including most of Islamic countries)to solve problems like poor hygiene, lack of acceptable health services and infrastructures to perform a functional educational system in the academic level .
Pointing to the steps taken by now to overcome these problems, Dr. Mobasher Al-sheykh emphasized on the neccesity of planning for active and systematic global solutions to confront this situation in the world of Islam .
He added that political convergence and attempting to find proper ways of supporting the less developed Islamic countries can be considered as the preliminary stage in the development of Islamic countries in every areas including science and technology.
WHO director in Iran called the "Networking Program of the Conference" the best way to put the customary bucratic phases aside in the routh of improving the scientific colaborations among Islamic countries and promised to guide the WHO prepared resources to support these colaborative programs.
http://publicrelations.tums.ac.ir/english/news/detail.asp?newsID=3781
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