HANOI, Vietnam – Thousands of cheering Vietnamese students welcomed Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates on Saturday with the sort of adulation normally reserved for rock stars.
The excitement that greeted Gates during his first visit to Vietnam reflects the communist country’s eagerness to follow the route of high-tech frontrunners such as India and its belief that Gates can help pave the way.
“I’ve been waiting for Bill Gates to come to Vietnam for a long time,” said Le Tuan Anh, 21, a second-year computer engineering student who clutched a copy of Saigon Entrepreneur magazine that profiled Gates on its cover. “Hopefully, this will boost IT development in Vietnam.”
Gates, whose visit comes as Vietnam seeks to carve a niche for itself in the high-tech world, said the country has the potential to become one of the Asian “miracle” economies by investing in its young people.
“The key element to allow IT to help the economy grow, and become an export sector itself, comes back to investment in education,” Gates said during a speech at the close of his whirlwind tour. “Clearly, I see that over the next decade Vietnam will join those miracles.”
Earlier in the day, thousands of students, some of them perched in trees and others on balconies, lined up outside the auditorium at the Hanoi University of Technology to catch a glimpse of him as he came to make a speech on the future of technology.
His arrival sparked momentary pandemonium as the students swarmed his entourage, pushing against security barricades.
After a standing ovation, Gates told his audience that “someone’s opportunity is not determined so much by geography but by the educational investment you make.”
“I certainly encourage students to use the Internet as much as possible and learn about the global economy. Most of the opportunity for Vietnam is in the global economy,” he said during a talk in which he encouraged the country’s leaders to consider not only manufacturing but software development and outsourcing.
His image projected on giant TV screens beside the podium, Gates later took questions from the young audience of about 1,000 inside the auditorium, as well as thousands of others watching him on the big screen outside.
Vietnam is keen to jump-start its high-tech sector, which got a big boost earlier this year when Intel Corp. announced plans to build a $300 million chip assembly plant in Ho Chi Minh City.
At the start of the day, Gates told Prime Minister Phan Van Khai that he sees “opportunity in Vietnam for talented people to have jobs in the IT sector.”
The two men met a year ago when Khai toured Microsoft headquarters in Redmond during his landmark visit to the United States and extended an invitation to Gates to visit Vietnam.
The country’s fledgling high-tech industry is working to raise its profile even as Vietnam battles a reputation as one of the region’s worst violators of intellectual property rights. It is one of the most prolific producers of pirated software in Asia, and copies of Microsoft operating systems sell on the street for about $2.
Microsoft representatives later signed an agreement with the Ministry of Finance, making it the first government office in Vietnam with licensed Microsoft software installed.
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