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== Koreans invade DU Hindi class ==
SOUTH KOREANS it seems are the foreigners most eager to pick up Hindi — and they want to do it fast. The majority of students enrolled for the short-term Hindi courses at Delhi University are South Koreans. Reason? Great job prospects in India with Korean majors Samsung, LG and Hyundai.
M.J. Park, director, Korea Trade Investment Promotion Agency, says that with 200 Korean companies already here and many more showing interest, India has emerged as the land of oppor tunity. “Earlier, Korea’s attention was on China. But now the scope for growth is greater in India,” says Park.
 
Over 3,000 South Koreans are working and studying in India. Of the 28 foreign students enrolled in the certificate, diploma and advanced courses in Hindi, 14 are from South Korea.
 
DU student Park Soon Ki is a graduate in global marketing and advertising from Busan. He and his friend Huo Jong Cheol, a computer scientist from Seoul, are in India studying, travelling, and job-hunting.
 
“Many Koreans working in India speak good English, but the workers in the factory speak Hindi,” says Ruchika Batra, GM (corporate communication) at Samsung. “We had a programme under which executives from Korea would spend a year in India learning the language and knowing the local culture.” Koreans at LG too are busy learning Hindi. “They make a lot of effort to localise themselves,” says Y.V. Verma, director (human resources), LG.
 
SOUTH KOREANS it seems are the for- eigners most eager to pick up Hindi — and they want to do it fast. The majority of students enrolled for the short-term Hindi courses at Delhi University are South Koreans. Reason? Great job prospects in India with Korean majors Samsung, LG and Hyundai. M.J. Park, director, Korea Trade In- vestment Promotion Agency, says that with 200 Korean companies already here and many more showing interest, India has emerged as the land of oppor- tunity. “Earlier, Korea’s attention was on China. But now the scope for growth is greater in India,” says Park. Over 3,000 South Koreans are work- ing and studying in India. Of the 28 for- eign students enrolled in the certificate, diploma and advanced courses in Hindi, 14 are from South Korea. DU student Park Soon Ki is a gradu- ate in global marketing and advertising from Busan. He and his friend Huo Jong Cheol, a computer scientist from Seoul, are in India studying, travelling, and job-hunting. “Many Koreans working in India speak good English, but the workers in the factory speak Hindi,” says Ruchika Batra, GM (corporate communication) at Samsung. “We had a programme un- der which executives from Korea would spend a year in India learning the lan- guage and knowing the local culture.” Koreans at LG too are busy learning Hindi. “They make a lot of effort to lo- calise themselves,” says Y.V. Verma, di- rector (human resources), LG.
 
== १८वां अन्तर्राष्ट्रीय सांस्कृतिक महोत्सव सम्पन्न ==
[[चित्र:18.-internasjonale-kulturfe.jpg|left|thumb|चित्र में बायें से ऊला अनुपम,आरिल स्योरूम, भारतीय राजदूत महेश सचदेव, सुरेशचन्द्र शुक्ल 'शरद आलोक,' नार्वेजीय सांसद हाइकी होलमोस और यू क़े क़े लेखक डा सत्येन्द्र श्रीवास्तव ]]
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