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Youth
Forum distributes newspapers to marginalized areas
Youth Forum
July 16, 2012
The Youth Forum,
in collaboration with the country's different newspapers publishers
and distributors, has embarked on a unique and cost effective method
of disseminating news to different marginalised parts of Zimbabwe.
This brilliant new initiative is part of the organization's
efforts in assisting youths in marginalised rural, mining and farming
communities to access crucial information that will help them make
informed decisions.
This initiative
involves the Youth Forum acquiring old newspapers from the print
media houses, papers that are considered old by the urban folk,
but whose news and value will still be fresh and valuable to the
rural folk who would not have had the opportunity to peruse these
papers. For as long as we can remember, the newspaper has been the
primary info-hub through which people interacted, but this info-hub
has always eluded the rural folk to such an extent that they miss
information on a lot of events that happen across the country and
globally, events that affect their day-to-day lives.
Whilst the shelf
life of a daily paper is considered to be only 24 hours in the urban
areas where they are readily available, the shelf life of the same
paper is longer in rural areas. A newspaper that is as old as 7
days is new to most rural youths, and they always jostle to read
newspapers that are even a month old, as they would not have come
across most of the news in such papers.
It is with this
in mind that the Youth Forum Information and Publicity Department
has undertaken this initiative where the organization acquires such
newspapers considered to be stale and redistributes them to the
rural, mining and farming folk, as they always contain 'latest
news' for these youths. These newspapers would otherwise have
been disposed of in a non-environment friendly manner when other
Zimbabweans still value their use. By bringing these papers to the
marginalised youths, we also believe we are not only increasing
the shelf life of these papers, but also the social currency found
in them.
The initiative
has only been dampened by lack of access to state-printed newspapers
like The Herald, Kwayedza, where the printers/distributors sell
old papers at the same prices with the current issues, prices which
make the initiative untenable. The Youth Forum is therefore pleading
with other organizations to neatly stake all such newspapers they
have and inform us of their location as well as the date and time
we can collect these for re-distribution. These papers will go a
long way in emancipating the youths in the marginalised areas in
terms of access to information.
The Youth Forum
strongly believes that newspapers are still an important part of
our democracy and their distribution to the end consumer is therefore
of more than normal commercial interest, hence this initiative,
which needs support from all individuals and associations that believe
in information generation as a key pillar of democracy. Your assistance
in this initiative will also go a long way towards advocating for
meaningful and peaceful participation of youths in the forthcoming
elections as research has shown that informed citizens are likely
to positively participate in democratic processes whilst uninformed
youths are the ones who engage in violent activities towards elections.
Visit the Youth
Forum fact sheet
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