Bindura — Christian Youth Towards Vision 2030 (CYTV 2030) is set to launch its 2026 Youth Mobilization Strategic Plan on December 4 in Bindura, Mashonaland Central Province, as the faith-driven movement steps up efforts to empower young people with life skills, moral values, and civic responsibility in pursuit of Zimbabwe’s Vision 2030.
Announcing the development, CYTV 2030 Provincial Chairman for Mashonaland Central, Mr. Humphrey Sambo, said the launch will mark a new phase in the organization’s mission to unite Christian youths from across denominations under a common banner of productivity, discipline, and national development.
“Christian Youth Towards Vision 2030 (CYTV 2030) is currently offering free life skills training to young people from different churches while also fighting drug and substance abuse and promoting sports activities across the province,” said Mr. Sambo.
“So far, in Mashonaland Central, we have trained 834 youths, and by 2026, our goal is to reach 10,000 young people with life-transforming skills just like other provinces.”
Mr. Sambo added that CYTV 2030 is also working to mobilize 100,000 new registered voters by 2026, emphasizing the organization’s commitment to nurturing responsible and active citizens who will contribute to the country’s social and economic progress.
“We are building a generation of Christian youths who are visionary, skilled, and patriotic — young people who serve God while building Zimbabwe,” he said.
Founded by Chaplain Chirume, Christian Youth Towards Vision 2030 is a national movement inspired by Nehemiah 4:6, which declares, “The wall was built because people had a mind to work.”
Since its inception, the organization has trained over 10,000 youths nationwide in various vocational and entrepreneurial skills — all offered for free — and continues to champion Education 5.0, encouraging innovation and self-reliance over job-seeking.
Chaplain Chirume has described the movement as a faith-based platform for uniting Christian youths across church backgrounds to tackle social challenges such as drug abuse and early marriages while driving development at community level.
In Mashonaland Central alone, over 13,000 youths have already been mobilized through CYTV 2030’s training, sports, and community empowerment programmes.
Mr. Sambo said the December 4 launch in Bindura will serve as a major milestone to strengthen youth mobilization and expand empowerment projects throughout the province.
“We are building a generation that has a mind to work, to serve, and to lead,” said Mr. Sambo. “Our 2026 strategy is about sustaining momentum — ensuring no church youth, no community, and no province is left behind as we also mobilize support for the ruling ZANU PF party.”
With its growing footprint and bold vision, CYTV 2030 continues to emerge as a beacon of faith-driven transformation, mobilizing young Zimbabweans to take charge of their future — one skill, one vision, and one province at a time.
New Ziana


