SA, Switzerland strengthen ties through education and cultural restitution
            South Africa and Switzerland have signed a Joint Declaration of Cooperation on Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET), reaffirming their shared intention to elevate the quality and impact of vocational education through stronger public-private collaboration.
The declaration was signed by Higher Education and Training, Buti Manamela, during President Cyril Ramaphosa’s State Visit to Switzerland, held from 29 to 30 October 2025.
The State Visit, described as highly successful, deepened bilateral relations between the two countries, focusing on enhancing vocational education, advancing research collaboration, and affirming South Africa’s commitment to cultural restitution and educational transformation.
Supporting young researchers in Switzerland
During the visit, Manamela met with a group of South African doctoral and postdoctoral students, currently based in Switzerland through the Department of Higher Education and Training’s International Scholarship Programme.
The engagement provided a space for students to reflect on their experiences and offer proposals on improving the scholarship platform, particularly in the areas of accessibility, mentorship, and long-term academic support.
The students also had the opportunity to engage with President Ramaphosa, expressing their hopes to contribute meaningfully to South Africa’s scientific and intellectual development.
Manamela reaffirmed government’s commitment to building a globally competitive, research-intensive post-school education system, noting that the scholarships form part of the Presidential PhD Programme, supported by the National Skills Fund and the Department of Science and Innovation.
According to the department, Switzerland is fast becoming an increasingly important partner in this programme. Over time, the number of South African scholars supported in Swiss institutions is expected to increase, as government works to expand postgraduate training opportunities and build stronger international research networks that benefit both individual scholars and their home institutions in South Africa.
Manamela highlighted that the new agreement aims to expand Swiss private-sector participation in South Africa’s dual apprenticeship model, combining structured work-based learning with theoretical instruction.
“This aligns closely with South Africa’s own TVET transformation agenda and efforts to strengthen industry alignment across priority sectors. There is room for many more companies, especially in manufacturing, agri-processing, engineering, and pharmaceuticals, to play a bigger role in skills development, both through direct training and curriculum support,” the Minister said.
President Ramaphosa and Swiss President Karin Keller-Sutter endorsed the initiative with a joint visit to the Vocational and Further Education Training Centre in Wil-Uzwil, where they witnessed the effectiveness of the Swiss model in bridging the gap between education and the labour market.
Expanding research cooperation and promoting knowledge sovereignty
Manamela also visited the University of Bern, where he held high-level discussions with university leadership and researchers.
The meeting highlighted ongoing partnerships in public health, environmental science, big data ethics, and doctoral training. Special emphasis was placed on strengthening cooperation with South African universities, particularly those that have historically lacked access to global networks of research funding and infrastructure.
The Minister stressed the importance of research sovereignty in a world where knowledge is increasingly commodified and concentrated.
Both South Africa and Switzerland acknowledged the need to defend and grow public research capacity in the face of rising commercial pressures. This includes investing in local innovation ecosystems, building joint doctoral programmes, and co-developing knowledge that responds to social needs, rather than just market demand.
Progress was also made on the proposal to establish a South Africa–Switzerland University Forum, which will serve as a long-term platform for faculty exchange, joint research, and institutional partnerships across disciplines.
Cultural restitution and return of the Shiluvana artefacts
Meanwhile, in his capacity as Acting Minister of Sport, Arts and Culture, Manamela officiated at the historic return of ancestral spiritual artefacts to the Shiluvana Royal Family from the Neuchâtel Museum of Ethnography.
The artefacts — a walking staff, a set of divining bones in a woven basket, and a bull’s foot bone, were taken more than a century ago by Swiss missionary Pastor Henry-Alexandre Junod from Prince Mugevisa Shiluvana.
The handover ceremony, attended by descendants of both the Shiluvana and Junod families, as well as Swiss cultural leaders, was described as a deeply symbolic act of restitution. It affirms South Africa’s call for museums and collecting institutions around the world to return dispossessed heritage to rightful custodians.
A Memorandum of Understanding was also signed to expand cultural cooperation and promote joint research on heritage and memory.
“This restitution offers us a glimpse of what a decolonised future might look like, one where museums return what was taken, and history is written with dignity and justice… we carry with us hope for a future where heritage is not commodified, but cherished, and where restitution is not exceptional, but expected,” Manamela said.
Throughout the state visit, South Africa and Switzerland recommitted themselves to an ambitious partnership rooted in mutual respect, innovation, and people-to-people exchange.
From strengthening TVET cooperation to building new research ecosystems and the return of dispossessed cultural artefacts, the visit underscored the power of education, science, and heritage in shaping a more just and sovereign future.
Manamela concluded the visit by reaffirming his department’s commitment to strengthening international partnerships, leveraging global academic and vocational expertise, and expanding opportunities for young South Africans to succeed in a rapidly changing world. – SAnews.gov.za
  
      GabiK
Mon, 11/03/2025 - 11:34
            679 views
      
				Tuesday 4 November 2025			
						
		sanews - 24 hours ago 
SA, Switzerland strengthen ties through education and cultural restitution
España y sus locuras : joven histérica se golpea, grita y discute con vecinos en la calle (VIDEO)
- rtVIDEO: conductora de Uber rechaza a un pasajero por estar demasiado gordo y lo amenaza con una pistola en EE.UU.
- rtExministra: la violación al debido proceso demuestra que Pedro Castillo es un perseguido político
- rtTHE CONVERSATION: Your gluten sensitivity might be something else entirely, new study shows
- dailymaverickSpiegel: Zelenski no admite el cerco de ciudad clave en Donbass por la impresión que daría a Trump
- rtOPINIONISTA: From wrecking ball to reform, Trump’s presidency has ignited unprecedented global shifts
- dailymaverickWORK IN PROGRESS: Proteas’ aggressive batting approach has led to more collapses than success so far
- dailymaverickMuere Dick Cheney, ex vicepresidente de Estados Unidos y arquitecto de la guerra de Irak
- elperiodicoPutin ordena al Gobierno que adopte una hoja de ruta para la extracción de metales y tierras raras
- rtQuién es Zohran Mamdani, el joven socialista y musulmán listo para hacer historia en Nueva York
- elperiodicoOPINIONISTA: UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese and the urgency of empathy in the face of injustice
- dailymaverickFOOD BASKET CHECK: Overall cost of basic food items continues to outstrip support for SA grant recipients
- maverickEl Ejército ruso repele varios ataques de fuerzas ucranianas que buscan romper el cerco en Krasnoarmeisk
- rtAl menos siete muertos, entre ellos cinco extranjeros, por una avalancha en el Himalaya
- elperiodicoTerremotos hoy, 4 de noviembre: consulta dónde ha habido sismos y su escala en España y resto del mundo, en tiempo real
- elperiodicoSe está alejando rápidamente del Sol : Revelan primeras imágenes del misterioso cometa 3I/ATLAS
- rtMuere el obrero rumano rescatado tras el derrumbe parcial de una torre medieval en Roma
- elperiodicoBRIDGING THE DIVIDE: G20 task force urges formation of global panel to tackle ‘inequality emergency’
- dailymaverickUganda: Uganda Urged to Cut Smartphone Taxes, Prioritise Broadband Use to Close Digital Divide
- allafricaSouth Africa: FlySafair Cabin Crew Down Tools Over Pay Dispute - South African News Briefs - November 4, 2025
- allafricaGuerra de Ucrania, en directo Última hora de las negociaciones con Trump y los enfrentamientos con Rusia
- elperiodicoNigeria: Govt Highlights 50 Tax Reliefs, Exemptions to Cushion Burden On Low-Income Earners, SMEs (Full List)
- allafricaNigeria: We ll Complete Lagos-Abeokuta Expressway Speedily, Craneburg Assures As Ogun Intensifies Reconstruction
- allafricaAfrica: Oxfam Reaction to Stiglitz Extraordinary Committee On Inequality Report for South African G20
- allafricaZimbabwe: Zambezi River Authority Allocates 30 Billion Cubic Metres of Water for 2026 Power Generation
- allafricaAfrica: What Is Fran #xE7;afrique? the Taboo Word That Reveals the Shifting Influence of France in Africa
- allafricaAfrica: Africa s Trade Deal With the U.S. Was Left in Limbo - What Exporters Can Do About It
- allafricaAfrica: African Countries Need Strong Development Banks - How They Can Push Back Against Narrative to Weaken Them
- allafricaLa UE busca a contrarreloj un acuerdo para reducir las emisiones un 90% de aquí a 2040
- elperiodicoLos demócratas de EEUU luchan por recomponerse de la derrota un año después sin un plan ni un líder claro
- elperiodico¿Dónde está Kamala Harris? La vicepresidenta que perdió ante Trump no descarta volver a presentarse a las elecciones en 2028
- elperiodicoMamdani y la alcaldía de Nueva York, gobiernos estatales, diseño de distritos y jueces: EEUU vive las primeras grandes elecciones desde la victoria de Trump
- elperiodicoNigeria: Mutual Benefits, May Baker, Sterling Financial Holdings Top Stock Pick This Week
- allafricaNigeria: Firstbank Partners With Verve to Issue Free Verve Debit Cards in Nationwide Flash Promo
- allafrica
Macron’s great lakes peace push falters amid gunfire and skepticism over Goma airport plans
- africanews
WHAT WE’RE WATCHING: Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere is an uncanny portrayal of the rock music legend
- dailymaverick
POLAR POLITICS: Antarctica’s ‘first political prisoner’ – Russia jails Ukrainian biologist for posing a ‘threat’ to oil ambitions
- dailymaverick
Newsdeck: Flight delays hit Orlando, Dallas, DC due to shortage of air traffic controllers
- dailymaverick