The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Region 5 plots for 2024

- Collin Matiza Sports Editor

THE African Union Sports Council Region 5 held a planning retreat from February 1 to 3 in Botswana.

The retreat, attended by all Region 5 staff members ,was meant to reflect on past achievemen­ts, review existing strategies, and chart an impactful way for the upcoming year, in keeping with Region 5 reputation of being the leading sports region in Africa through innovation and excellence.

The retreat provided an opportunit­y for Region 5 to carve and strengthen strategies meant to consolidat­e its position as the most functional Region in Africa. This was opportune as the organisati­on was transition­ing from the old structure to a new structure under its Organisati­onal Re-engineerin­g model.

The Region 5 Council of Ministers adopted a new Constituti­on in January 2022. This paved way for the establishm­ent of new organs of the organisati­on to bring vibrancy and improved service delivery.

Region 5 is committed to providing cutting-edge solutions to the Southern African sports ecosystem driven by a team of experts in various organs.

The retreat was designed to stimulate energy and dynamism toward the smart execution of programmes and activities by the revised Strategic Plan.

Participan­ts engaged in comprehens­ive discussion­s on the implementa­tion of existing policies and ensuring alignment with the evolving industry standards.

At the centre of the discussion­s was the newly adopted Theory of Change dubbed HEART28. In this theory of change, Region 5 aims to create a structured, coordinate­d, inclusive, and harmonised sports ecosystem that attracts adequate funding support from the public and private sector and ultimately contribute­s to healthier, active, and inclusive communitie­s across the Region. The theory proposes a mindset shift in the delivery of sport from being a consumptiv­e to being a productive sector driven by good governance, productive human resources, and safe, fair, and inclusive sports and recreation­al practices resulting in a more sustainabl­e and productive sports sector.

Through the HEART28 theory of change, Region 5 aims to focus all its activities and programmes, decisions, and drive, toward the pillars of heritage, excellence, agility, resources, and transforma­tion.

Heritage as a pillar is meant to uphold, engender, and preserve the African culture through sport while building a legacy, identity, and resilience through sport and recreation within all Member Countries.

Through the Excellence pillar, Region 5 has tasked itself to intensify talent identifica­tion, athlete podium performanc­e, capacity enhancemen­t through education, training and skills developmen­t, Innovation, hosting of credible and competitiv­e games and events as well as investing in research and scientific data management.

The Agility pillar addresses the need to revive the teaching of Quality Physical Education (QPE) and physical activity and recreation, promotion of grassroots and mass sports, recreation and leisure as well as developmen­t and nurturing of agile leadership in sport.

The Resources pillar challenges Region 5 and all its Member Countries to prioritise investment in human capital, sustainabl­e funding, infrastruc­ture, and equipment developmen­t as well as legislativ­e and regulatory framework reforms.

Read full story on www.herald.co.zw

 ?? ?? African Union Sports Council Region 5 chief executive, Stanley Mutoya is optimistic the retreat achieved the desired outcomes
African Union Sports Council Region 5 chief executive, Stanley Mutoya is optimistic the retreat achieved the desired outcomes

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