More Manipuri girls to leave for Japan as Care Givers under TITP

Besides promising career prospects in Japan, girls’ salary package witnessed a quantum jump from Rs. 25,000 per month to Rs. 1.48 Lakh a month.

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NEW DELHI: Manipur has taken a lead in the north-east region of India to send its skilled workers as care givers to Japan for its aging population.

A batch of twenty girls with a nursing background who braved the hardship of COVID-19 induced lockdown last year, took the training program at HI-NO-DE Foundation involving Japanese language and culture up-skilling, are set to leave for Japan.

Many more such batches would closely follow soon.

The training was imparted to the girls under the TITP (Technical Intern Training Program) scheme of the National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC), an offshoot of the Ministry of Skill Development & Entrepreneurship.

All of them attained Japanese language proficiency and qualified N4 level to become skilled care givers.

HI-NO-DE Foundation – a company involved in skill development and placement of youths of India in Japan, is empaneled as ‘Sending Organization’ by National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC) under the TITP Scheme.  It has launched its first batch of training care givers in the middle of January, barely one a half month before the lockdown was clamped in India due to the Coronavirus outbreak in 2020.

Manish Kumar, MD & CEO, NSDC

Manish Kumar, Managing Director & CEO, NSDC,  said, “It is really commendable that despite COVID pandemic, due to our mutual efforts we have been able to send skilled manpower to Japan something as a mandate that was given to NSDC in Oct 2017.”

He was addressing the successful trainees during a felicitation ceremony in New Delhi recently in the presence of a score of Japanese companies.  Arun K Pillai, Chief Strategy Officer, and Ms. Ritu Agarwal, Head, TITP, NSDC were also present on the occasion.

“Manipur has taken the initiative to send its people to japan and I am sure these girls would act as our ambassadors and spread the positive word about India in Japan. I know people from the North-eastern states are very hardworking and they will adjust well in Japan. I am sure Japan would be more excited to get more people from Manipur,” said Manish Kumar.

Manish Kumar also said, “We have been very careful about the quality. HI-NO-DE Foundation and others as our training partners emphasize that we want to send the best to Japan.”

The Manipuri girls looked quite excited with regard to their career as caregivers in Japan.

Samyotha, a girl from Manipur is a college dropout because of problems back in her family with four siblings, is very upbeat about the things to come up her way in Japan.

She said, “From the very childhood, I was attracted to the Japanese culture and it was my dream to work in Japan. I would listen to J-pop and watch anime and Japanese movies when she in school. I have received a quantum jump in my salary from Rs. 25,000 per month to Rs. 1.48 Lakh a month.”

During the training, she was quick to learn the N4 level of Japanese language proficiency.

Neeraj Sharma, MD, HE-NO-DE Group of Companies

Neeraj Sharma, Managing Director, HI-NO-DE Group of Companies and Representative of HI-NO-DE Foundation said that the batch was launched in the mid of January last year.

“In the one-and-a-half month, we entered into the biggest pandemic. In July/August we started to mobilize the second batch. We are now starting the third batch from Wednesday (Feb 10) of 19 students with 13 with a nursing background and three with a non-nursing background. And during all this, we had had all the support from NSDC as that has been at a phone call away,” said Sharma.

Sharma urged the Japanese companies to promote the movement of skilled workforce and of interns from India to Japan so that more and more interns could go to Japan.

For nine years, HI-NO-DE has been engaged in various businesses within human resource development.

Initially, the company started as a Japanese language institute, and currently, it is dispatching Indian IT and other advanced human resources to Japanese companies, in Japan, having a tuition school for Japanese elementary and junior high school students. At HI-NO-DE, all instructors are native Japanese qualified trainers

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