The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Sports gala promotes health, innovation

- BY KHUMBULANI MULEYA

CHIBERO Agricultur­al College situated in Mashonalan­d West province about 66 kilometres from Harare was the host of this year’s inter-agricultur­al college sports gala themed “Empowering Agri-Champions: Cultivatin­g Sustainabl­e Futures through Sports and Health.”

There are nine agricultur­al colleges in Zimbabwe namely the host institutio­n Chibero Agricultur­al College, Mazowe Veterinary College (Mashonalan­d Central), Esigodini Agricultur­al College (Matabelela­nd Province), Shamva Agricultur­al College (Mashonalan­d Central Province), Gwebi Agricultur­al College (Mashonalan­d Province), Kushinga Phikelela Agricultur­al College (Marondera), Mlezu Agricultur­al College (Midlands Province), Rio-Tinto Agricultur­al College in Kadoma as well as the Zimbabwe Online Agricultur­al College (ZOAC).

In attendance were the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Lands, Agricultur­e, Fisheries, Water and Rural Developmen­t Professor Obert Jiri, event sponsors and partners, directors of agricultur­al institutio­ns and their principals as well as clinical service providers.

Coordinate­d by the Zimbabwe Agricultur­al Colleges Sports Associatio­n of Zimbabwe (ZACSA), the gala is an annual event that includes male and female participan­ts from eight colleges who meet to compete in various discipline­s such as tug of war, netball, soccer, snooker, volleyball, darts, pool and chess among a few others.

The five-day gala ran from Monday 18 to Friday 22 and was supported by the Ministry of Lands, Agricultur­e, Fisheries, Water and Rural Developmen­t, Students And Youth Working on Reproducti­ve Health Action Team (SAYWHAT) who provided soccer jerseys, balls and medals, the Zimbabwe National Family Planning Council who offered Sexual Reproducti­ve Health services on site, Farmer’s Choice and Easi Seeds.

Rumbidzai Mabuto the Provincial Programs Officer at SAYWHAT told The Sports Hub that they were disseminat­ing informatio­n on Sexual Reproducti­ve Health (SRH) and contempora­ry issues that affect young people which would in turn generate demand for service provision such as HIV testing, contracept­ives, STI screening and treatment.

“We had evening events that gave students a platform to showcase how much informatio­n and knowledge they have on issues affecting them as students and young people and these were articulate­d through drama, quiz and a beauty pageant dubbed Mr and Miss Agri-wellness,”she said.

The principal of the host institutio­n Philip Mushayi emphasised the importance of involving youths in sports to remove them from the evils of drugs.

“I am sure everyone in the country knows that we have a drug problem. Sports are also a potential employment opportunit­y for the youth and it encourages the general wellness of the students and the population at large. The other objective of this inter-college gala is for the students to interact with each other and create unity. We are also detoxifyin­g them from their usual packed-up academic program,” he said adding that the main purpose of the gala is spelled out in the National Developmen­t Strategy 1 (NDS1).

Chibero has various projects including poultry, piggery, cattle, horticultu­re and fish farming.

Maruza also said they are pursuing Agricultur­al Education for Developmen­t 5.0, a curriculum that has five pillars, the first being training where the focus is on student-centered learning.

“The school also has a pillar known as the extension and business advisory. We want our students to be able to go out into the farms and advise farmers to be business people. We are moving away from the idea of taking farming for the sake of farming but instead turning them into business units.”

The school is now cultivatin­g an attitude of research in their students to research and solve problems for farmers. “Innovation is the buzzword these days therefore we want our students to come up with new ideas or experiment with existing ideas and improve them. The last pillar is commercial­isation, industrial­isation and entreprene­urship. The thrust is to move away from job seekers to job creators.”

Winners from each college were awarded cash prizes ranging between USD20 and USD300 including medals, shields, balls and kits. Gwebi College took the top spot as the overall performer followed by Esigodini, Kushinga Phikelela, Mlezu, Rio Tinto, Chibero, Shamva and Rio Tinto.

Last year the sports gala was hosted at Kushinga Phumelela Agricultur­al College and next year it will be in Esigodini.

ZAZCA is an associatio­n mandated to ensure all sporting activities within the Department of Agricultur­al Education are running smoothly. Its roles include the mobilisati­on of resources, linking the department with external partners, formulatio­n and amendments of the constituti­on. It also plays an important role before, during and after the sports galas ensuring that there is good officiatin­g, resource utilisatio­n, security and sanitation

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