In Conversation With Nkosinathi Moshoana - CEO of Primestars and Executive Head of What about the boys

Loading player...
South Africa continues to grapple with one of the highest rates of gender-based violence and femicide (GBVF) in the world, with women and children disproportionately affected by abuse, assault, and violence across communities. While government and civil society have invested heavily in criminal justice responses, shelters, awareness campaigns, and policy frameworks, many experts argue that the country cannot “arrest its way out” of the crisis.

Increasingly, attention is shifting toward prevention — particularly the social norms, behaviours, and gender expectations young people inherit long before violence occurs.

This conversation comes as Primestars and The YouthStart Foundation launched What About The Boys 2 (WATB2), an expanded national youth intervention programme aimed at addressing harmful gender norms among both boys and girls. The initiative builds on the first phase of the programme launched in 2022, which reportedly reached more than 60 000 boys in over 180 schools nationally and showed measurable reductions in bullying and violence-supportive attitudes.

The new phase introduces a dual-gender approach, bringing boys and girls together into shared learning spaces to challenge stereotypes around masculinity, emotional expression, dominance, silence, consent, and relationships.

The programme also signals growing recognition from government departments, educators, businesses, and civil society that preventing GBV requires earlier intervention in schools, communities, and youth spaces — not only reacting once violence has already happened.

A major development announced at the launch was a partnership with the Department of Higher Education and Training to expand the programme into universities, TVET colleges, and tertiary institutions. This comes amid growing concern about violence, toxic masculinity, mental health struggles, bullying, and unsafe campus environments affecting young people across South Africa.
18 May English South Africa Entertainment News · Music Interviews

Other recent episodes

IN CONVERSATION WITH VUSI MONYELA,COSATU Gauteng Provincial Chairperson

COSATU Gauteng has raised concerns following the Gauteng Department of Education’s disclosure that it uncovered 41 cases of alleged corruption, fraud, financial mismanagement and 11:10 maladministration at schools across the province. The allegations reportedly involve various individuals within the school environment, including principals, School Governing Body members, educators, administrative staff…
1 Jul 11 min

IN CONVERSATION WITH STEVE MABONA,Gauteng Department of Health spokesperson

The Gauteng Department of Health has reassured patients, staff and members of the public following a minor fire incident involving a standby generator at Bertha Gxowa Hospital. The incident occurred on the morning of [date], following a power outage that affected the surrounding central business district area at approximately 04:08…
1 Jul 7 min

IN CONVERSATION WITH LUNGELO MKHAMBA

The South African Social Security Agency is intensifying its efforts to combat fraud and corruption within the social grants system by taking action against officials who abuse internal processes. SASSA Chief Executive Officer, Mr Themba Matlou, has warned that officials found to have bypassed the agency’s biometric system to process,…
1 Jul 9 min

In Conversation with Onwabile Lubhelwana

The Gauteng Department of Education has launched investigations into 41 matters involving alleged corruption, fraud, financial mismanagement and procurement irregularities in public schools across the province.
29 Jun 9 min