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ZIMBABWE:
Youth provide leadership for AIDS effort
IRIN
(PlusNews)
May 18, 2004
HARARE - With young
people in Zimbabwe most at risk from HIV/AIDS, a new project is seeking
to empower youth representatives to make a difference among their peers.
The District Response
Initiative (DRI), which works to reduce the effects of HIV/AIDS on rural
youth in seven of the country's most impoverished districts, is already
using trained peer eductors to encourage HIV/AIDS awareness at youth-friendly
clubs and centres.
Now the DRI has drafted
youth office-bearers - teenagers appointed as young parliamentarians,
governors and councillors by the ministry of youth - into the cause.
The office bearers,
aged between 15 and 20, were appointed to their one-year posts after excelling
at public-speaking competitions organised at school, district and national
level by the ministry of youth. The strategy utilises their popularity
among their peers and ability to get age-mates to listen to them and talk
more freely about issues they would feel too embarrassed to discuss with
adults.
Although the youth
leaders had already worked on AIDS awareness in their districts, the DRI
- funded by the UN Foundation (UNF) through the Southern Africa Youth
Initiative on AIDS (SAY) - has aimed to provide more coherent direction
under the coordination of the National AIDS Council's District AIDS Coordinators
(DACs).
The office bearers
- many of them young women - conduct meetings and activities at their
schools or travel to other schools. Under the DRI, the role has been expanded
to include lobbying their seniors in government and the DACs for change
on a wide range of child-related issues.
An estimated 1.8 million
Zimbabweans are living with HIV/AIDS, with girls in the 15 to 19 age group
most at risk.
In March a two-day
workshop was organised for the child leaders to start the DRI process
of developing them into effective disseminators of HIV/AIDS information.
They were instructed in the dynamics of "servant leadership" and how to
answer difficult questions about HIV/AIDS.
The workshop also
sought to help improve communication links with the DACs, which some of
the youth leaders said remained problematic. "They are supposed to supervise
and help us with our work, but some things are not made clear to us. When
we tell them about the resources the district needs, nothing is done,
or they don't tell us when they have them at hand - they just go on to
plan on their own," Janet Mugutso, one of the child leaders, told PlusNews.
Strategies were discussed
to bring about better planning, implementation and monitoring of youth
leaders' activities through the DACs, as a result of which youth leadership
desks are to be established in each district, management manuals made
available, and collected data periodically analysed to assess the effectiveness
of the programme.
Zimbabwe's child president,
Blessing Mamvoto, whose duty it is to monitor the activities of all the
child parliamentarians, commented: "Most of us have been crying for this
workshop. We must know what is expected of us - none of us are born leaders."
One of the objectives
of the DRI has been to create awareness among adults, leaders and stakeholders
in the districts to support young people's reproductive health concerns,
but the youth leaders said more work had to be done before this became
a reality.
"It is important for
parents to talk to their children. Parents must be educated on condom
use - right now, it's looked on as taboo. They don't represent modern
thinking," said Faith Thandanguni, a child governor from Midlands province.
Tanya Hungwe, child
governor of the Mashonaland East Province, thought the perceptions of
some traditional leaders were also obstacles to be addressed. Others spoke
of hostile teachers at the schools they visited, or mentioned transport
and communication problems.
The child leaders
PlusNews interviewed also called for greater government involvement in
their work, and bemoaned the lack of financial assistance.
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