GFTU BGCM 2019 Minutes
or saw on the TV fairly recently, I think it was only a couple of weeks ago. I
always wake up to the radio in the morning, to the news and as I came out of
my woozy sort of sleep this is what I heard. The Commons Digital Culture
Media and Sports Committee said that sporting and cultural activities are being
overlooked by ministers in favour of arresting and imprisoning young people
and should be harnessed to help fight knife crime and gun violence. Even in
my kind of slightly dozy state, I thought, “Genius! Nobody would have thought
of that, would they?” Keep people active and engaged and it might actually
impact on knife crime, gang affiliation. I am sure, as someone who has
devoted so much of his life to promoting and providing positive interventions to
young people across all areas of sport and education, our next speaker must
have been tearing his hair out when he read those particular headlines.
A little bit about our next speaker. It gives me great pleasure to be able to
introduce him, because we first met some years ago and we have been having
conversations for quite some time and we have been trying to get some kind of
synergy and some kind of connection between the work that we do and the
work that he does and the platform of the GFTU, I think, is the perfect platform
for that connection to be made successfully. Our next speaker is a former
British athlete. During a distinguished sporting career he was the World
Heavyweight Karate Champion and World Team Karate Champion and won
more than 50 national and international titles. He was honoured in 1995 in the
Queen’s New Year’s Honours List with an MBE for his services to sport. His
services run way, way beyond that, I can assure you. He is a leading youth
activist and expert in sports development and politics and has a passionate
interest in the social and human development of young people and
communities. He is the founder and Executive Chair of the Youth Charter, a
UK based international charity and United Nations non-governmental
organisation that uses the ethics of sport and artistic excellence to tackle the
problems of educational nonattainment, health and equality, antisocial
behaviour and crime in some of the UK’s most troubled communities. He is
also Chair of Governors of the University of East London.
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