Youths in Nigeria under the aegis of the Not Too Young To Perform (NTYTP), a leadership development advocacy group, have joined calls for the immediate review of over 20-year-old sanctions against the Republic of Zimbabwe.
In a statement signed by the executive coordinator/national president of the group, Comrade James Ezema, the NTYTP noted that âyoung people in Zimbabwe who were not party to whatever led to the sanctions are the ones bearing the heavy burden of the bilateral restrictions against the country.â
The Nigerian youth group then called on the heads of government in Nigeria and other African countries to pressure the United Nations,
United States of America, and other International Diplomatic Systems and influential countries to bring to an end to the sanctions on Zimbabwe.
âWe therefore join the All-Africa Students Union (AASU) and other African youths to empathize with our peers in Zimbabwe, who are daily bearing the burdens of the decades of military, economic, and other sanctions against their father land.
âAnything that negatively impact on one youth anywhere in Africa, is negatively impacting youths everywhere in the continent and any other part of the world.
âThe psychological impact of sanctions on todayâs generation of Zimbabweans, as a result of slowed progress and inhibited economic recovery, can only be imagined.
âAgreed, that sanctions programs by some international systems target
human rights abusers and those who undermine democratic processes or
facilitate corruption, prolonged military sanctions could, on the other
hand, further expose the most vulnerable people in Zimbabwe to the
adverse effects of insecurity.
âWhile we call on the Zimbabwean government to continue to strive to
take steps towards addressing the root causes of Zimbabweâs ills,
including corrupt elite and their abuse of the countryâs institutions
for their personal gains, we commend the President Emmerson Dambudzo
Mnangagwa administration for ongoing reforms,â it said.
âAnd as sanctions are not intended to be permanent but to incentivize
behavioural changes, we believe that the over two decades of sanctions
have achieved that purpose in Zimbabwe and needs immediate reviewâ, the
NTYTP stated.
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