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Youth
Service report opens can of worms
Clemence
Manyukwe, The Financial Gazette
May 24, 2007
http://allafrica.com/stories/200705240672.html
A PARLIAMENTARY report
has opened the lid on the rot in government's much-touted National
Youth Service programme, revealing how youths and soldiers are fighting
over food, and how female recruits live in constant fear of sexual
abuse by their instructors.
The report, tabled in
Parliament last week, recommends the temporary closure of the camps,
underscoring the legislators' "horror" at the living conditions
at the centres. The report was compiled after tours of the national
youth service centres and vocational training centres by Members
of Parliament (MPs).
Youths frequently go
to bed hungry, the MPs established, and at one youth camp, there
had been "an upheaval" over food. "The committee
was disturbed by the diet offered at the National Youth Service
Centres.
At Guyu National Youth
Service Centre in Matabeleland South, the committee was horrified
by the state of the barracks. They had no doors or windows and the
students complained about finding cats and snakes in the barracks."
Trainees get a cup of
porridge with no sugar each morning, and lunch is always sadza with
either beans or boiled cabbage. At Magamba Vocational Training Centre
(VTC), which the MPs visited in March, students said they had been
on a monotonous diet of sadza and cabbage every day since the centre
opened in January.
"The committee was
dismayed by the state of hostels at Magamba VTC. The hostels were
old and falling in and doors had no handles. The ceilings were badly
affected by termites and the students were crowded in small rooms,
as some hostels had become inhabitable," the report said.
"The condition of
the ablution facilities at Magamba was quite appalling as well.
In some hostels only one out of six toilets was in working order
and showers were rusted and leaking." At Kaguvi VTC, the report
reveals how a fight erupted between soldiers and the youths.
"The committee was
informed of an incident of violence involving army personnel, a
unit of the operation Maguta programme based at the centre, and
National Youth Service students. An upheaval arose over the issue
of delays in the serving of food and one student had his arms broken."
The report says the administrators
of the youth service centres have not been forthcoming with information
regarding life at the camps. The MPs have recommended that cases
of violence and abuse be reported to the police and be fully investigated.
"Since the inception of National Youth service, there have
been some worrying reports that female trainees were sexually abused
by male instructors or by fellow male trainees," the report
says.
Zanu PF Gutu South MP
Shuvai Mahofa chairs the 17-member committee, dominated by the ruling
party.
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