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Afghan Youth Parliament

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Afghanistan's Youth Parliament
AbbreviationAYP
Formation14 August 2016; 8 years ago (2016-08-14)[1]
HeadquartersKabul, Afghanistan
Membership
122
Official language
Pashto & Dari Persian

The Afghan Youth Parliament (AYP) is a youth organisation in Afghanistan, consisting of democratically elected members aged between 16 and 35.[2]

Formed in July 2016,[3] the parliament has around 122 members, who are elected from the 34 provinces of Afghanistan. The membership is 33 percent female, 3 percent nomads, three percent disabled people, and 1 percent each Hindu and Sikh.[citation needed] The youth parliament has been established in order to further involve the country's young generation in socio-political affairs.

The 122 members of AYP elected five board members(Mr. Said Kabir Husaini as director, Mr.Mohammad Iqbal Sakhi as 1st Deputy, Ms.Khalida Khalwat as 2end Deputy, Mr. Saif Ul Rahman Shafaq as general Secretary and Ms. Mina Baloch as Deputy Secretary of Afghanistan's Youth Parliament.

Before that Aqa Mohammad Qurishi was the elected chairman of the Afghanistan Youth Parliament for two years (Aug 2016 - Aug 2018). Mr. Qurishi is originally from southern-Helmand province and has master's degree in International Relations. Later on; he was appointed as Director of Foreign Relations for the State Ministry for Parliamentary Affairs.

The Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, in order to include young people in social decision-making, bringing them closer to policy-makers of the country, and increase their overall capacity; the Afghanistan Youth Parliament was established through the Deputy Ministry of Youth Affairs, with financial assistance of the United Nation Population Fund (UNFPA) and with the coordination of the Upper House of the Parliament (Mashrano Jirga) in the Year 2016 and the Youth Advisor to H.E President of Islamic Republic of Afghanistan .

Notable members

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Muqadasa Ahmadzai - social and political activist.

References

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  1. ^ "Afghanistan's Youth Parliament". UNAMA. 14 August 2016. Retrieved 14 August 2016.
  2. ^ "Youth parliament to be formed within a month, Kamal Sadaat". Kabultribune. Retrieved 28 June 2016.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ "Afghanistan's Youth Parliament To Soon Meet - KabulTribune The Only Point To Get Afghanistan Latest News". www.kabultribune.com. Archived from the original on 27 September 2016. Retrieved 26 September 2016.