The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Boxers trade gloves for brooms

- Tadious Manyepo Sports Reporter

LOCAL boxers have taken it upon themselves to champion cleanlines­s in the communitie­s they live.

The boxers, technical staff, and administra­tors last Friday joined the rest of the country in cleaning the environmen­t when they swarmed Matongo Shopping Centre in Mabvuku to take part in the cleanlines­s campaign. The first Friday of each month is dedicated to national clean-up and the sportspers­ons are not to be left out

Speaking on the sidelines of the clean-up campaign, Zimbabwe’s pioneer female profession­al boxer Monalisa“Queen of the Jungle” Sibanda said sport can only thrive in a clean set-up.“We know of fellow boxers and other sports-persons who have quit the sport because of health complicati­ons associated with dirty environmen­ts ,” she said.

“Who knows, maybe those people could have won medals for the country in major sports competitio­ns like the African Union Sports Council Region 5, African Games, or Olympics but they couldn’t pursue their dreams. “That is why it is always good for sports-persons and ordinary citizens to join hands and see to it that the environmen­t they live in is always safe.

“We are saying everyone has a responsibi­lity to ensure that the environmen­t is clean. We have lost athletes and citizens due to unsafe environmen­ts because of our actions, so let’s be safe.”

African Boxing Union welterweig­ht champion Aliya Phiri said a clean environmen­t is all that boxers need to thrive.

“Imagine waking up and trying to go for a road run and see that the road is full of garbage. The litter will also provide refuge for pathogens which cause diseases and that’s not safe,”he said.

“We are saying let’s unite as sports-people and the citizens to make sure that our environmen­t is safe and clean. Unsafe environmen­ts do not only affect sports-people. They hurt the general well-being of people whether one is a sports-person or not. We are saying together we can do it.”

The clean-up was put together by the Zimbabwe National Wrestling and Boxing Control Board ZNWBCB) who collaborat­ed with the Environmen­t Management Agency and the Zimbabwe Republic Police.

ZNWBCB acting chief executive officer Priscilla Kadungure said boxers and wrestlers will continue playing a leading role in cleaning the environmen­t.“What we want to achieve at the end of the day is excellence. We need a clean operating environmen­t and we are saying the boxers and wrestlers should also be actively involved in cleaning the environmen­t ,” saidKadung­u re.

“We are going to implement a lot of initiative­s aimed at safeguardi­ng and keeping the environmen­t clean because we know what a clean environmen­t does to our sport.”

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