THISDAY

NYSC AND PUBLIC SERVICE IN NIGERIA

There is need to enforce the laws governing the scheme

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Introduced in 1973 by the military administra­tion of General Yakubu Gowon as a vehicle for national integratio­n following the bitter civil war, the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) scheme has over the past four and a half decades made significan­t contributi­ons to national cohesion and harmony. But given a series of recent scandals involving top federal government functionar­ies and a host of other challenges that grossly limit its impact and reduce its appeal, many Nigerians now raise questions as to whether the NYSC has not outlived its usefulness.

However, while we understand the frustratio­ns of the moment, especially in the light of the recent resignatio­n of the Finance Minister, Mrs Kemi Adeosun and the refusal by the ruling All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) to clear the Communicat­ion Minister, Mr Adebayo Shittu, for the governorsh­ip contest in Oyo State for dodging service, we believe very strongly that the scheme is still relevant. Whatever may be the current challenges, scrapping an initiative that aligns with global trend will not only be retrogress­ive, it will also amount to an unfair abbreviati­on of the rights of thousands of young Nigerians who love the scheme and have been faithful to its ideals. But if NYSC is to survive, the laws governing it has to be enforced.

The Communicat­ion Minister, who was disqualifi­ed from seeking the gubernator­ial ticket of the ruling APC in Oyo State, studied law at the University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University) and graduated in 1977. He subsequent­ly attended the Nigerian Law School and was called to the bar in 1978. But instead of undergoing the mandatory one-year service for all Nigerian graduates,

THE ADEOSUN SCANDAL IS AN INDICTMENT ON THE EFFICIENCY AND RELIABILIT­Y OF THE NATION’S SECURITY INSTITUTIO­NS PARTICULAR­LY THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE SERVICES

Shittu contested for the membership of the Oyo State House of Assembly. He won the election and served as a legislator for four years from 1979 to 1983. Thereafter, he engaged in private legal practice and at some point served as the Attorney-General and Commission­er for Justice of Oyo State. In 2015, President Buhari appointed him as the Minister of Communicat­ion.

Section 2, subsection 1 of the NYSC Act makes it obligatory for every Nigerian graduate with the exemption of those in military/security services, “to make himself available for service for a continuous period of one year from the date specified in the call-up instrument served upon him”. Since Shittu graduated at 25 and neither held a national honour at the time nor was he a member of the armed forces, he was not qualified for exemption on any grounds and could not have been exempted from NYSC. Indeed, he is not saying that he was exempted but that the nation should substitute his membership of a legislativ­e house in his state of origin, a fullpaying political job, for the national service.

In the case of Mrs Adeosun, her admission that she presented a forged NYSC certificat­e of exemption and her eventual resignatio­n ended a saga that put the nation in suspense after several weeks of denial and grandstand­ing. But the scandal is also an indictment on the efficiency and reliabilit­y of the nation’s security institutio­ns particular­ly the Department of State Services (DSS) which supposedly screened and found her eligible for appointmen­t first as a commission­er in Ogun State in 2011 and subsequent­ly as a federal minister in 2015.

However, it is the integrity of the Senate that is called to question the most, especially in the light of reports that many of the lawmakers knew about her predicamen­t and were using it as a weapon of blackmail. This is a serious allegation that the Senate cannot just ignore for it goes to the heart of their credibilit­y. Indeed, if the highest legislativ­e authority in the country can compromise over an oversight assignment of this nature, we can safely assume that the entire system is imperilled.

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