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Weekly
activity update
National Youth Development Trust
May 09, 2012
Bulawayo
Young
women's study circle
Young women
from Luveve high density suburb met at the Luveve Youth Centre to
interrogate the reasons for poor participation of young women in
national and local developmental and political processes. The young
women highlighted parental consent as a major challenge to their
effective participation, saying that they needed to explain to their
parents how such programmes are of benefit to them before being
allowed to attend, if at all they are allowed. This, they said does
not usually apply to their male counterparts. Some young women sited
lack of confidence resulting from both lack of exposure and lower
levels of education as reasons why they choose to remain quiet in
some activities they attend.
With regards
to elections, the young women highlighted that their lives are mainly
confined to the private sphere and as such, national processes such
as elections have not been a priority to them. A number of them
showed lack of understanding on the relevance of taking part in
elections to their day to day lives. However, after the discussions,
the young women indicated that they now understood the importance
of actively participating in making decisions that affect their
lives. They also expressed interest in registering to exercise their
right to vote.
This meeting
was held as part of the Young Women study circles, an initiative
by NYDT which seek to increase young women's participation
through creating safe spaces from them to interact without intimidation
from their male counterparts.
Focus
group meeting
Youths from
Methodist Village (located in peri-urban Bulawayo) have blamed their
lack of interest in the Voting process on the lack of accountability
and consultation by their elected leaders. The young people said
that the last time they saw both their councilor and MP was during
the campaign stages of the 2008 elections.
Despite being the poorer parts of the constituency, they claimed
that the MP even failed to allocate a portion of the Constituency
Development Fund but rather concentrated the fund in the urban side
of his constituency.
They blamed
the delimitation process for joining together their area (peri-urban)
with an urban area to form one ward as a major contributor to their
being marginalized when it comes to developmental processes. They
instead called for the separation of Peri-urban Pumula from the
urban side of Pumula. This was seen as the best way of ensuring
that they will be adequately represented.
The challenge
of inadequate representation was also cited as the reason why most
young people have chose to stay away from voting. However at the
end of the meeting it was agreed that more young people from the
area should register to vote as this will oil their campaign for
the designation of their area as a separate constituency. They also
requested that there be representative specifically for their community
in the Bulawayo Youth Council, who is not necessarily the ward 17
youth councilor.
Focus
group meeting
Youths in Pumula
have showed lack of interest in participating in electoral processes
citing violence, intimidation and lack of credibility of the electoral
system as reasons. Despite the fact that there is a voter registration
centre within their ward, a number of young people in Pumula are
not registered voters. Some of them highlighted that they were not
inspired to register to vote because politicians only use them to
gain power but later forget about the promises they would have made
to the electorate. High unemployment and a seeming lack of interest
to address the challenge was said to be a typical example of how
elected leaders easily forget about their constituencies. The topic
of discussion was: "The importance of youth participation
in electoral processes."
Visit the National
Youth Development Trust fact
sheet
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