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The
battle for the recognition of youth rights in Zimbabwe
Now Zimbabwe Trust
October 08, 2011
A difficult
transition of youth development from patronage and dependency to
assuming future leadership roles and, role in development through
active and conscious participation prompted the writing of this
paper. As Now Zimbabwe Trust, we were motivated by deep frustration
over continued youth vulnerability and marginalization enmeshed
by inadequacies of accurate information on youth development and
compelling ambition to add some diversity to existing accounts of
the youth development process in Zimbabwe. Youth development, activism
and advocacy has not been smooth up to this day due to quite a number
of mitigating factors ranging from political disturbances, lack
of political will and commitment on the part of policy makers in
addressing the plight of young people, repressive laws, inadequate
funding, victimizations, unlawful arrest, only to mention but a
few. It is beyond any reasonable doubt that young people are the
future and, more interestingly, the majority yet they are left out
of mainstream development processes such as policy formulation which
affects their own future.
According to
facts and statistics on development, about 73% of the population
is made up young people, unemployment rate is above 81%, HIV and
AIDS prevalence rate 14, 2%, 48% of women in Zimbabwe (15-24yrs)
are living with HIV, 85% are in informal employment and 83% living
on less than USD2 a day (majority living below poverty datum line
of USD509 per month). Such facts evidently indicate how youth rights
are being denied on a massive scale. It is however unfortunate that
there is no disaggregated data on youth development and this has
led to youth vulnerability. Youth vulnerability may go unchecked
if the need for research which goes beyond pilot projects to cross
sectional surveys and creative research is not invested in so as
to come up with a responsive framework to foster youth rights to
development. Further to this Zimbabwe crafted and adopted a national
youth policy in 2004. However this policy is highly defective and
flawed in that it was plunged into policy by the youth ministry
then without proper consultation and involvement of young people
in its formulation.
Research has proven that youth in Zimbabwe seem to be unfamiliar
with the current policy and this has seriously affected its influence
on youth development, empowerment, and protection of youth rights,
interests and participation. Up to date the youth policy has not
been revisited regardless of the urgent need to do so and attempts
by youth and youth organizations in advocacy to have it revisited.
This directly leads us to the fact that youth rights are being grossly
violated under the pretext of patronage, negligence and lack of
political will. Validation during field work indicated that it is
not that the youth are incapable but rather their rights are being
denied on a massive scale. The inclusive government has not been
able to adequately address the plight of the youth due to discrepancies
on strategy and how to go about in unpacking the youth bag of challenges.
Instead the GNU
has focused on economic development which tends to benefit the business
community and not national development which benefits the majority
who are the youth. With only four years left to achieve the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs), there is greater need to strengthen youth
participation and inclusion in mainstream development work to expedite
the speedy realization of the MDGs.
Ignoring us in policies, programs, and resource allocation is a
main contributing reason to youth vulnerability, poverty, further
spread of HIV and AIDS and marginalization. This culminates in risky
behaviors, exploitation as tools of political violence, sexual abuse,
drug abuse, crime and economic migration. This coupled with lack
of basic amenities such as access to clean water, sanitation, basic
health care and meeting daily needs have led the youth to be more
vulnerable, insecure about the future, traumatized and hopeless.
It thus suffices to say that youth rights are greatly being overlooked,
yet as young people we are the future. Little has been done to address
the unpleasant realities faced by young people which proves to be
a futile recipe for the future, young people have the right to be
trained as future leaders and empowered.
It is unquestionable to note with great concern that youth in Zimbabwe
form a vulnerable and marginalized group owing to a myriad of factors.
Due to the level of human and societal development in Zimbabwe,
it has been difficult to locate a definite age-group for the youth.
While many developed and developing countries have set 25 years
as their cut-off age for youth, the current youth policy of Zimbabwe
recognizes youth as people from 10 -30 years of age. This is coupled
with lack of disaggregated data on youth development by gender,
age and subgroup including ages of 10-14 and 15-24 years. Youth
are mentioned in many government policies but do not participate
and are overlooked mainly as a result of the inadequacy of the youth
policy to foster youth participation. Young people bear a disproportionate
burden of the country's political and economic woes thus leaving
them vulnerable. The Zimbabwe Youth Council has not been able to
adequately advise government on the real position of youth development
as it is supposed to as the main coordinating youth body on behalf
of youth organizations and associations.
The National Youth Policy has failed to protect youth rights and
interests. The major question is; what is our future then when uncertainties,
vulnerability, grappling in social poverty, dependency, insecurity,
violence, fear, hopelessness have become our daily bread. It will
be salutary to applaud the position of youth organizations, activists
and supporters in their endeavors of embettering lives of young
people in the battle for the recognition of youth rights in Zimbabwe.
Such endeavors has not been easy and I believe now is the time for
coherence, solidarity, mutual understanding and development cooperation
embracing lessons learned from the best practices for a sustainable
youth development where youth rights are recognized and young people
are at the centre of their own development. Youth across Zimbabwe
strongly believe that now is the time to demand their rights and
have the right to be heard as we go towards the end of the International
year of the youth, what remains is the battle for the recognition
of youth rights.
Now Zimbabwe Trust strongly believes in the recognition of youth
rights, we reaffirm our belief in the humanitarian imperative and
its primacy. Young men and women have the right to respect of their
dignity, to the acknowledgement of their equal human capacities,
including the capacity to make choices; to the same opportunities
to act on those choices; and to the same level of power to shape
the outcome of their actions as enshrined in the Humanitarian Charter.
NZIT has learnt lessons from the best practices in development work
through interaction with the youth and creative research during
validation of literature on youth development in Zimbabwe.
It is therefore imperative to revise, implement and evaluate the
Zimbabwe National Youth Policy through full participation of young
people with expertise in HIV/AIDS, poverty, education and invest
adequate political and economic support from government, intergovernmental
and non-governmental institutions active in Zimbabwe. Governmental,
non-governmental and intergovernmental sectors must cultivate opportunities
for more political advocacy and capacity building for young people
in order to recognize youth rights and move towards a sustainable
youth development process which is key to national development.
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