Daily Trust Saturday

Time to rethink the NYSC scheme

- Kene Obiezu writes from Abuja

To don the famous khaki of the National Youth Service Corps used to be a thing of great pride. But it appears that is no longer the case with events that have unfolded in the country since the scheme was establishe­d in 1973.

A fragile history

In 1973, the Scheme was created as an avenue for reconcilia­tion, reconstruc­tion and rebuilding of the country after the Nigerian Civil War. It was establishe­d based on Decree No. 24 that stated that the Scheme was created “with a view to the proper encouragem­ent and developmen­t of common ties among the youths of Nigeria and the promotion of national unity.”

The promotion of national unity which had always been emphasised, became especially important following Nigeria’s horrifical­ly internecin­e Civil War which turned the country upside down between July 6,1967 and January 15,1970, and perhaps forever, leaving a country perpetuall­y broken.

When General Yakubu Gowon, the then military head of state, floated the Scheme in an attempt to hasten the healing of national wounds, many perceived that it was a sop to the ghosts of the Civil War, or worse still, salve for a conscience savaged by the haunting cries of the children who agonizingl­y breathed their last as two misguided military officers led Nigeria down a most perilous path.

If the NYSC was exciting in the beginning for the structured way and manner it enabled Nigerian graduates to take in the breathtaki­ng diversity of their country while serving some of Nigeria’s most vulnerable communitie­s, the gruel has since soured, leaving a bitter taste of disillusio­nment, disappoint­ment, disenchant­ment and even death.

A scheme of death?

On Sunday, June 19,2022 about four corpses were found floating on the river close to Otuan and Ayama communitie­s of the Southern Ijaw Local Government Council of Bayelsa State. One of the corpses was of a female member of the National Youth Service Corps. The boat accident was reportedly caused by bad weather, poor visibility and lack of life jackets for passengers.

On June 1, 2021, Faith Onoriode, a female member of the National Youth Service Corps was released by bandits who had kidnapped her on March 21, 2022 on the Abuja-Kaduna road. Miss Faith Onoriode, a Biology/ Microbiolo­gy graduate of the Delta State Polytechni­c, Otefe, Oghara, who was posted to the orientatio­n camp in Jigawa State was only released after the family reportedly paid N2 million naira in ransom, accompanie­d with a motorbike, five Tecno phones and N100,000 worth of recharge card.

A sinister sense

Perhaps, it makes some dark sense in Nigeria’s atmosphere of insecurity that corps members should be imperiled too. However, the question remains to what extent they will be imperiled if they do not have to travel to some of Nigeria’s most volatile states to serve their country under the Scheme?

Corps members who used to be spared the horror of attacks have now become routine targets as Nigeria continues its ugly descent into the doldrums of insecurity.

Fractured unity

It would appear that in the face of Nigeria’s increasing insecurity and the preference of many of those who form the crop the country’s leadership to tout ethnicity over unity, the Scheme has lost its allure.

As travel across the country has become fraught with risk; many graduates deployed for the scheme actually try to work around the scheme’s increasing­ly corrupt placement system to get favourable postings, or travel only at great risk to their lives.

Some of the scheme’s orientatio­n camps in the increasing­ly volatile Northeast have also remained shut for years.

A defeated dream

Bearing these ugly developmen­ts in mind, it would appear that in spite of its many promises, and the many pearls it has thrown Nigeria’s way for forty-nine years, the scheme should finally be put out to pasture.

With the 2023 elections looming, and with the Independen­t National Electoral Commission more likely than not to deploy corps members as adhoc staff, it would seem that in Nigeria, there is hardly anything that can be guaranteed these days, including the safety of corps members serving in various parts of the country.

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