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Youth
participation crucial for credibility of Zimbabwe's next election
Youth Forum
May 10, 2011
The positive
and wholesale participation of the country's youth will be
pivotal if the next election in Zimbabwe is to be credible, free
and fair. In the past the youths' energy has been diverted
towards negative contribution to the electoral process and they
have become infamous and synonymous with the violence that has characterized
previous elections in Zimbabwe.
The Youth Forum notes and contends that youth participation in previous
elections has been dismally low and highly negative. According to
a study
commissioned by the Zimbabwe
Election Support Network (ZESN) in April 2010, only 18% of the
current voters' roll can be classified as youth (18 - 30 years).
This figure is quite shocking considering that Zimbabwe is generally
regarded as a youthful population with over 60% of the country under
the age of 35 years.
Contrary to the above figures which point towards an apathetic youth
towards civic and political processes, young people have actually
been a crucial factor in many elections that have occurred in the
past. Due to the endemic shrinking of space for political participation
by an elderly ruling elite, bend on perpetuating their stay in power,
the energy and eagerness of young people to participate in the electoral
process has been systematically channeled towards peripheral roles.
It is common knowledge that previous elections in Zimbabwe has seen
them competing with their mothers as praise-singers of elderly politicians
at political rallies during electoral campaigning periods. Nefarious
politicians have gone on to drug these youth and coercing them to
perpetrate gruesome acts of violence against real and perceived
antagonists and rivals of these politicians. Youth militias and
vigilante groups have become synonymous with elections, and this
trend was quite evident in the run-up
to the sham June 27 2008 presidential run-off election, whose result
we all know later culminated in the animal we call the inclusive
government today.
The Youth Forum avers that for as long as the energy of young people
is diverted towards such peripheral and negative roles in the electoral
process, we will continue to have discredited elections in Zimbabwe.
We continue to emphasize the need to have meaningful participation
of young people in the electoral process as a precursor to building
a robust citizen response and participation in the governance process
- in allowing the citizens to have the final say on who governs
them through regular, free and fair elections. Given their demographic
dominance, it is through the participation of young people in the
elections that Zimbabwe can truly realize democracy and a government
that is truly representative of the majority. As Youth Forum, we
call upon all stakeholders to prioritize ensuring that the youth
are empowered to take a leading role in deciding who governs them
from time to time. The Youth Forum has already taken a lead in launching
the 'Youth Go Register to Vote Campaign' which seeks
to have at least one million youth having registered as voters by
the time the next election is held in Zimbabwe. We urge the government
of Zimbabwe to be sensitive to the plight of many young Zimbabweans
who are being frustrated in their quest to register as voters. We
further demand that:
- The Registrar-General's
office stop playing truant by turning away youth wishing to register
as voters, alleging that the president has not yet called for
elections. Our understanding of the law is that voter registration
is an open process, just like national registration or vehicle
registration, as long as it is done within working hours.
- Traditional
chiefs and headmen in some rural areas stop denying youth wishing
to register as voters 'proof of residence' in their
areas - this proof of residence is a pre-requisite for registration
and denying them this is tantamount to denying them their democratic
right. We have names of such traditional leaders and note that
history will judge you harshly.
The Youth Forum
will not tire in its quest to see a democratic Zimbabwe where youth
play an important role in safeguarding democracy.
Visit the Youth
Forum fact
sheet
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