With the ineffective handling of the National Youth Service Corps
scheme over the years, there has been calls for it to be scrapped or
restructured.
When General Yakubu Gowon established the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) scheme on May 22, 1973, he saw the need to create an avenue to reconstruct, reconcile and rebuild the country after the Nigerian Civil war.
The
NYSC scheme was created by decree No. 24 which stated that the scheme
was established with a view to the proper encouragement and development
of common ties among the youths of Nigeria and the promotion of national
unity.
The major objectives of the scheme were
to create a united, strong and self-reliant nation, a great and dynamic
economy, a land of bright and full opportunities for all citizens.
It
was also meant to inculcate in Nigerian youths the spirit of selfless
service to the community and to emphasize the spirit of oneness and
brotherhood of all Nigerians, irrespective of cultural or social
background.
But 43 years after the creation of the NYSC, it is now glaring that it has lost its glamour and
relevance and there is the need to either scrap it or restructure it to
bring about the effective reorientation the founding fathers had in
mind.
There are so many reasons that proponents of
the scrapping of the NYSC scheme put up and it is pertinent the
government of the day takes a more cursory look at it.
Over
the years, the scheme has not been up to scratch with the ideals it was
set up with as Corps members have been neglected, used as Guinea Pigs
and dumped at will, so much that it is no longer the desire of every
young Nigerian student to look forward to being posted to another state
to serve the nation on graduation.
It has been watered
down and at times, young graduates pay their ways to be posted to states
they prefer or even remain in the home states for several reasons.
The
NYSC scheme is now seen as a conduit pipe for siphoning public funds.
Corruption has permeated its very fabric and creates an avenue for the
staff of the secretariat to enrich themselves.
The
orientation camps are not maintained with diseases spreading rampantly.
Corps members have lost their lives due to lack of medical facilities
in the camps while some only go there to indulge in unlawful activities.
Their allowances are not paid on time while some officials connive with the Corps members to defraud the body.
The
prevalent insecurity in the country is another reason why the NYSC
scheme should be phased out immediately. Corps members have been killed
in the North-Eastern state where insurgency has become the order of the
day while in the South and South-West, many of them have been abducted,
maimed and killed.
The cases of Corps members
killed during election duties in different parts of the country are
still fresh in the minds of Nigerians. Many of them have been killed in
avoidable accidents while traveling to the states they were posted to.
In
the past few weeks, Nigerians have lost three promising Corps members
in strange circumstances in orientation camps in Zamfara, Bayelsa, and
Kano States due to the negligence of the officials at the camp.
The case of Rachael Oladepo,
a 26-year-old a first-class graduate in Aviation Transport Management
of Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Ogbomosho, at the NYSC
orientation camp in Kano is the most pathetic.
Reports
have it that the lady who had reported to the camp sick was forced to
join in a parade with the camp officials thinking she was pretending to
be sick.
When
her condition got out of hand, she was taken to the clinic and was
given an injection that worsened her condition. The young lady died in
the process, another young dream dimmed due to incompetence.
With
the defeat of the original intentions of Gen. Gowon, it is right to
believe that the NYSC scheme has overstayed its welcome and should be
scrapped with immediate effect.
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