Anurag Thakur calls for enrolment of more youth volunteers in nation-building
Jun 25, 2022
Kevadia (Gujarat) [India], June 25 : The Union Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports Anurag Thakur called upon states to increase the enrollment of youth volunteers in the Nehru Yuva Kendra Sangthan (NYKS) and National Social Service (NSS) programmes as a way to increase the involvement of youth in nation-building.
Speaking on the concluding day of the two-day National Conference of Ministers of Youth Affairs and Sports at Kevadia in Gujarat, Thakur pointed to the key role that youth volunteers had played in serving civil society during the Covid pandemic and said that states must tap into the huge youth potential of India and engage them in a range of nation-building projects.
The second day saw the presence of the Honourable Chief Minister of Gujarat Bhupendrabhai Patel.
Thakur stressed the need to use technology to bring the youth of the nation together and create a mobile app that would ensure the last-mile connectivity of youth volunteers across the nation.
The two-day conference that saw representatives from 33 states and Union territories including 15 ministers of Youth Affairs and Sports from various states was a national platform of discussions and deliberations on the way to make India a sporting nation.
During the discussions Anurag Thakur said that there is a need to develop a common information bank of all states which could reflect existing infrastructure in different regions and sporting disciplines, a number of coaches, and equipment facilities so that future planning can be done easily.
"We need to take a scientific approach towards our forward planning. There are states who are good at certain games, they have better coaches and better infrastructure that could be used by athletes from other states as well. Coordination will be the key to achieving the vision of Honourable Prime Minister Narendra Modi ji to see India among the Top 10 sporting nations in the world. We always have to keep the athlete at the centre and look at their ease of living even while planning our policies," he said.