Friday, April 26, 2024

Youth policy targets bashment culture

Date:

Share post:

The National Youth Policy came about, in part, because of a rapidly developing bashment culture which saw Barbadian youths imitating alien and socially undesirable practices.
That was one of the implied roots of the policy, which was introduced to the House of Assembly today by Minister of Family, Youth, Sports and Culture Stephen Lashley.
Piloting debate on a Resolution to take note of and approve the National Youth Policy of Barbados, Lashley noted that even before the present Government had taken office, the Democratic Labour Party had noted in its manifesto the rise of a bashment culture that saw youths emulating mores borrowed from alien cultures and fostering a value system based on what was convenient and pleasurable but socially undesirable.
Noting that it was clear, upon taking office, that the country needed to return to the traditions which had made Barbados the envy of the Caribbean, Lashley said the current policy was therefore the fulfillment of a solemn pledge made to the youth of Barbados.  
He emphasized that vital steps had been required to empower Barbadian youths, and that such empowerment could never be realized by “quick-fix, pie-in-the-sky” prescriptions.  The only path to true youth empowerment, he added, was via consultation, mobilization of the youth and consistent programmes.
Full reports in tomorrow’s MIDWEEK NATION

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here
Captcha verification failed!
CAPTCHA user score failed. Please contact us!

Related articles

300 Nigerian inmates escape after suspected Islamist raid

Around 300 inmates are on the run after a suspected raid by Islamist Boko Haram militants on a...

815 hit by vomiting bug at Stuttgart spring festival

A norovirus outbreak at a festival in south-west Germany has affected more than 800 people. They caught the vomiting...

‘Ease on the way’ for St Joseph commuters

Government is on the job when it comes to long-standing complaints from residents of St Joseph on fixing...

King Charles to resume public duties next week

Britain’s King Charles III will resume public duties next week following “a period of treatment and recuperation,” Buckingham Palace announced...