Vita Gazette

News from Italy

“Love Better” campaign from New Zealand

Vita gazette – The New Zealand government allocates a “$4 million budget” for young people suffering from ‘love pain’. The government will spend this budget on young people who break up with their lovers and suffer from love. The “Love better” campaign will run for three years.

The New Zealand government opened the mouth of the purse for young people who broke up with their lovers and suffered from love. New Zealand thinks its young people should forget about their exes and move on with their lives, and it plans to spend millions of dollars to make this happen.

The country’s campaign, lasting for three years, has caused repercussions worldwide today. Within the scope of the ‘Love Better’ campaign launched in the country, a budget of approximately 4 million dollars (6.4 million New Zealand dollars) will be allocated to help young people who broke up with their lover get over the process they are going through.

Priyance Radhakrishnan, Deputy Minister of Social Development, announced that they took this decision in the results of the survey conducted among young people. According to the survey, more than 1,200 teens needed support to resolve their love and separation issues. Again, according to the survey sent to the ministry, 68 percent of young people experience bad experiences beyond the pain of separation.

How will the campaign be done?

The opening of the promotional video for the campaign, released today, reads, “Breakups suck.” Then there are the statements of young people who need to get away from their ex-lovers and even block them on social media platforms, and young people are reminded that they are not alone in this process.

The program will last three years and be run by “Youthline”, one of New Zealand’s leading youth organisations. As part of the “Love better” campaign, special texts, videos, and podcasts will be prepared for young people whose relationships have ended healthily. Prepared special content will be shared on social media platforms like Instagram and TikTok. Young people who broke up with their lover and suffered from love will also be able to share their experiences with other people through this campaign. In addition, young people can reach the helpline, established within the project’s scope, by phone, e-mail and SMS and request support.

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