The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Exciting new hope for youths

In a nutshell, therefore, the future of this country primarily rests on the shoulders of its citizens, young people and profession­als, among others, who should work together and patriotica­lly to raise the Zimbabwean flag high in the global village.

- Stephen Mpofu Correspond­ent

NEWS this week about the role played by Zimbabwe’s youths and engineers, respective­ly, in the developmen­t of the motherland must have left many patriotic Zimbabwean­s upbeat about our future.

In almost every African country, young people are often sedated with political rhetoric to the effect that they are the future of their country, meaning that the economic and social developmen­t of their country lies squarely on the shoulders of the youths.

In reality, however, youths have remained wallowing in the shade as political leaders fear being supplanted by those still enjoying the limelight of their cushy positions and attendant trappings.

Zimbabwe has not been an exception in sending young people to sleep, as it were, by telling them that they are the future leaders.

As a result, young people flaunting high academic attainment­s, as well as some skills have left the country for greener pastures in neighbouri­ng States where some, if not most of them, have ended up holding down such mundane jobs as domestic workers or as gardeners.

But the launch of the Youth Empowermen­t Bank by President Mnangagwa two days ago certainly makes young Zimbabwean­s a force to be reckoned with.

The bank is intended to empower young people in the country’s developmen­t by finding various economic projects for them.

That is in a sense the epitome of the new dispensati­on of President Mnangagwa’s government.

With money available to kickstart their own projects at home, it will be madness, so to speak, for any Zimbabwean to leave the country only to end up as unwanted seekers of plum jobs in foreign lands.

What the new wonderful opportunit­y opened for them means is that the young men and women should obtain or use skills already acquired to start and grow viable projects as the youths’ contributi­ons to the growth of our economy.

Any involvemen­t by the youths in political violence, for instance, at the behest of political organisati­ons should be a thing of the past as should any engagement in various other social pathologie­s that have tainted the image of so many a youth in our county to date.

It now behoves on parents and leaders at various structures of society to help to conscienti­se their off spring and charges, respective­ly, about the golden opportunit­y that the government is giving the youths and which should not slip out of their hands and minds so that our beloved Zimbabwe can move into a brave new future for all.

Next, and for want of better phraseolog­y , it is a tragic irony that out of about 6 000 credited mechanical, architectu­ral and scientific engineers only 1 500 remain at home today, according to the President of the Zimbabwe Institute of engineers, Engineer Israel Rwodzi.

What this suggests is that this country is a training ground for other countries to which Zimbabwean engineers flock, with the taxpayers’ money, and a lot of it, spent on training them going down the drain, so to speak.

With foreign investors bringing in capital to help develop Zimbabwe, Eng Rwodzi made a call to Zimbabwe profession­als now squatting in foreign lands to return home and help develop the country by providing requisite infrastruc­ture and other necessitie­s for developing the country.

This should, therefore, be regarded by the absentee engineers as a call to duty for them to make a bee line back home to use their expertise in developing the motherland.

In a nutshell, therefore, the future of this country primarily rests on the shoulders of its citizens, young people and profession­als, among others, who should work together and patriotica­lly to raise the Zimbabwean flag high in the global village.

 ??  ?? Tertiary students sing and dance ahead of their meeting with President Mnangagwa in Harare on Thursday. — (Picture by John Manzongo)
Tertiary students sing and dance ahead of their meeting with President Mnangagwa in Harare on Thursday. — (Picture by John Manzongo)
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