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The National Youth Service is a programme of the Zimbabwean government for Zimbabweans of ages 10 to 30. It was authorised in 1979[1] and established in 2001 under the presidency of Robert Mugabe.[2] Its stated purpose is to "transform and empower youths for nation building through life skills training and leadership development."[3] The National Youth Service has been condemned in the West and in Africa for gross human rights violations on behalf of the ZANU-PF party. Within Zimbabwe the graduates of the service are known pejoratively as green bombers after the fatigue uniforms they wear.[4]
[edit] PurposeThe service claims to instill in young Zimbabweans a sense of national identity and patriotism. While it proposes to unite people above party lines, it also promotes wariness of "foreign influence and intervention" in national politics.[3] The opposing view, both inside Zimbabwe and abroad, holds that the service indoctrinates its members with absolute loyalty to ZANU-PF and trains them for military operations to enforce its dominance.[5][6][7] The government plans to make the program mandatory for all youths.[2] [edit] IdeologyAccording to an opposition group, members of the youth service are taught exclusively from ZANU-PF campaign materials and speeches. These include an anthology of Mugabe's speeches titled Inside the Third Chimurenga. The speeches glorify Mugabe's land reform programme and ZANU-PF heroes Border Gezi and Chenjerai Hunzvi. They accuse the Movement for Democratic Change of seeking a return to white rule.[8][9] [edit] Training centresConditions in the service training facilities are reported to include poor construction, frequent hunger and sexual abuse of girls and women.[2] [edit] References
[edit] External links
Directorio de Enlaces Directorio dmoz Directorio espejo dmoz Pedro Bernardo |