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In Conversation With Poonam Ahluwalia
Nirmala Garimella “The
Youth should be looked upon as a positive force in the community and be
employable” says Poonam Ahluwalia, Executive Director of EDC who is currently
busy with the YES Regional Forum 2003 from December 14 to the 18th in Hyderabad,
India. In between our conversation on the oncoming summit, she is busy scrolling
on the laptop showing me the enthusiastic emails of young people from different
YES countries of the developing world. The one that she chooses to read out
is from Estonia, a thank you note from a leader of a Group that has had success
in a YES Campaign. Other success stories come from Pakistan, Rwanda, Iran,
and Mozambique, Afghanistan and Zimbabwe.
When young people have
the chance to voice their opinion, employment concerns, learning new skills
and training are usually top priorities. Says Poonam Ahluwalia, who is spearheading
this campaign, “Young people in developing nations feel a sense of idealism
that they can make a difference in the lives of their own people. It is in
these youth that we hope to focus in rural areas. Youth Employment is an
issue that has not received Global attention. But to eradicate poverty is
to stimulate the youth to look at developmental issues and see if they can
provide solutions to these problems”.
She then elaborates on the point “The government doesn’t have jobs, the
private sector are in the process of laying off workers and reengineering.
So where do the youth look for employment. At the YES Regional Forum at Hyderabad
we hope to look at employment from an entrepreneurial angle, to engage and
employ youth in developmental issues like water and sanitation, renewable
energy resources, the digital divide and other developmental sectors. We
provide them with two things, Skills and Mentoring”, says Ahluwalia,” and
we work with them to give them credibility and a name. We connect them with
people who matter. We provide a lot of capacity building. The message that
we give the youth is “We will give you the tools, we will hold your hand
but you have to create the opportunity”.
The YES campaign (Youth Employment Summit) was launched in Alexandria Egypt,
a 10-year campaign of milestone events to create livelihoods for an additional
500 million young adults by 2012,under the banner of the six E’s employability,
employment creation, equity, entrepreneurship, environmental sustainability
and empowerment. To this, has been added the seventh one, HIV/Aids that will
be the present focus of the regional campaign at Hyderabad.
The Hyderabad YES Regional Forum 2003 which will be largely workshop based
will showcase the effective youth employment strategies across the globe
and forge partnerships for creating economically and environmentally viable
livelihood opportunities for young people. Ahluwalia is all praise for Chandrababu
Naidu, the Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister who has been extremely supportive
and involved in this event. “I was struck by this sign in his office that
read “Action without Vision is a nightmare. Vision without Action is a Pipe
Dream”. “He definitely exemplifies that”, she echoes.
The conference is to be inaugurated by the President, Dr. A. P. J. Abdul
Kalam Azad. It will bring together 600 high level representations from Government,
multilateral and bilateral agencies, civil society, business, international
donors and youth delegates from over 20 YES country networks, from ASEAN
& SEAMEO and SAARC countries.
The Summit will also be launching the’ YES Academy for Entrepreneurship
Development' in Partnership with the Department of Youth, AP Government,
M S Swaminathan Foundation and the YES Campaign at Education Development
Center. The Academy will provide technical expertise, incubation support
for new enterprises, identify sectors for employment and engage diverse stakeholders
and above all develop demand-driven curriculum and offer training and development
services to youth development and employment practitioners.
“I have a basic optimism that makes me
feel I can do anything” Says Poonam Ahluwalia and from a full time homemaker
in 1996 she has indeed come a long way. She hopes that the New England Indian
Community will look at these issues and offer their support “We are not duplicating
any effort there. The best thing one can do is make a personal investment
in these Youth”.
Some Interesting Statistics of India
The 1991 Census data shows that the number of youth in India is 155.5
million or 18.3 percent of the total population (excluding the state of Jammu
& Kashmir). Further, it is projected that the proportion of the youth
is likely to go on increasing at least until 2011 and then it will stabilize
around 2021 at the present level. It is currently estimated to be About
20 percent (for the age group of 15-24) and 35 percent (for the age group
15 to 34).
Agriculture accounts for only 7-8 percent of the total investment and employs
as high as 60 percent of the labor force while the employment in the organized
sector is 7 percent of the total labor force while it accounts for 65 percent
of the total investment.
In the existing labor force, 45 percent of male and 80 percent of the female
labor force are totally illiterate, 29.4 percent of male and only 14 percent
of the females have education up to the primary level, and that only 12.8
percent of male and 2.5 percent of the female workers have attained the secondary
and higher level of education.
For more information log on to http://www.yesweb.org
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11/06/2003
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 With the YES team, Egypt, September 2002
 With Jose Ruiz-Salas (a YES staff member)
 With Chandrababu Naidu, CM in Hyderabad
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