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The
New Age Voices Issue 28
Youth Agenda Trust
February 11, 2012
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Kasukuwere,
ZYC under fire
The beleaguered
Zimbabwe Youth Council (ZYC) has been plunged into turmoil following
the Minister of Youth, Indigenisation and Empowerment Saviour Kasukuwere's
decision to dissolve the ZYC board in December amid revelations
that the finance committee of the board was about to institute a
probe on ZYC director Livingstone Dzikira and his cronies at the
institution.
Allegations
are that he finance committee had for the past year unearthed a
series of fraudulent activities that allegedly involved Kasukuwere,
Dzikira and other key council personnel.
Close sources
in the board told this reporter Tuesday that the finance committee
had questioned the irregular procurement of furniture delivered
to Kasukuwere's office by the ZYC using funds availed to ZYC
for the procurement of office furniture by the United Nations Development
Programme (UNDP). However, what seems to have irked Kasukuwere is
the behaviour of the board members that he personally nominated
and those that he thought were aligned to his Zanu PF party whom
he felt were becoming hostile to his leadership and to that of his
trusted lieutenant, Dzikira.
In October,
the board led by Kasukuwere's nominee in the board Lucky Kandemiri
in his presentation to the parliamentary portfolio committee on
youth, warned Kasukuwere and Zanu PF leader Robert Mugabe of North
African style uprisings if they continued to ignore the plight of
young people in the country.
The final straw
seemed to have come in December on the side-lines of the strategic
planning meeting of the council in Victoria Falls when the board
snubbed Kasukuwere and opted to caucus it first leaving Kasukuwere
with an egg in his face prompting him to cancel the meeting and
immediately dissolve the board.
The ZYC recently
flighted adverts in the Sunday Mail for the vacant board member
positions and surprised many when it stated that prospective board
members who wanted to get into the board through a round of elections
should meet set academic qualifications, clearly defeating the point
of going to elections.
Youths who were
interviewed by The New Age Voices said that they decided not to
take part in the process because it is clear that the process is
flawed and hence participating would legitimise the process. "We
will not waste our time trying to get into this board because we
know that the process is not transparent. We saw how the previous
board was frustrated when they wanted to carry out their duties
so we feel that for as long as the ZYC Act is not amended and is
not in tandem with the African Youth Charter, we will be wasting
our time," said one youth leader who requested to be anonymous.
However, some
youth leaders say that they are also worried about the role that
is being played by UNICEF and UNDP in this whole circus saying that
the two multilateral agencies were wasting money fuelling an institution
that is becoming an enemy of young people which they say is not
serving any purpose at all.
Meanwhile, all
is not well at the troubled institution with news filtering through
to The New Age Voices that Dzikira has embarked on a clean-up exercise
of the Institution where those who are deemed unsympathetic to his
leadership are being involuntarily transferred to regional and district
offices where most of them are met with empty trays, a situation
which some of them are saying is tailor-made to frustrate them.
Efforts to get
a comment from Dzikira were fruitless the whole week as he was said
to be attending to some business in Chiredzi. The ZYC used to be
based at Zanu PF headquarters before the formation of the Inclusive
Government but later switched base as Zanu PF tried to apply
cosmetic reforms to the council and also shake off the stigma associated
with Zanu PF through allowing the election of 7 board members to
the council.
However, the
fresh face that ZYC sought to present has turned out to be a very
ugly face as most youths are slowly disassociating themselves from
the activities of the council which they now view as an "extension
of the Zanu PF youth wing".
Two years after
its re-branding, youths say the ZYC has not been able to offer any
meaningful support to youth organisations but is surprisingly implementing
activities on its own without the involvement of youth organisations.
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