Thursday, 25 October 2012

NYSC: Actualising founding fathers’ dream

Decades after the establishment of the National Youth Service Corps, the country is leaving no stone unturned to sustain the dream of the scheme, writes NATS ODAUDU.

It was a surprise for so many people in the country when the Batch ‘A’ of 2012 set of corps members left their orientation camps and their presence could hardly be felt in the city centers as has always been the case. Corps members that usually leave orientation camps, especially in townships like Abuja, Port Harcourt, Lagos and other capitals are always found stranded in the sun, rain and other terrible conditions.
Some suffer from the combination of rejection from places posted for their primary assignments, lack of residential accommodation and intolerable service conditions. This is in addition to a situation where the NYSC became a source for the supply of cheap and unappreciated labour for private and commercial companies instead of providing the required service to the Nigerian nation as dreamt by the founding fathers.
The NYSC also got its biggest blow when in 2011 corps members became a target of politically inspired crises in some parts of northern Nigeria leading to the death of many young men and women who were caught in the middle of the crises while contributing to the democratic experience of the country.
These terrible experiences have begun to phase out as a result of the reforms put together and implemented by the Federal Ministry of Youth Development under the former minister, Mallam Bolaji Abdulahi. This new dispensation saw to it that corps members were posted to areas where the country needs them and they will have the opportunity of serving the nation and contributing to its human and infrastructural development. It has seen to it that corps members are now being posted to rural areas where they are needed and appreciated thereby resolving the issue of rejection, insecurity and also fulfilling the integration dream of the founding fathers.

The NYSC was established by decree 24 of 22nd May, 1973. It was to be repealed twenty years after by decree 51 of 16th June, 1993 which is now an Act of Parliament. In 1973, the Gowon-led administration initiated the NYSC scheme to, among other things, create a true sense of patriotism among Nigerian youths; afford the youths the basic or foundational experience of what to expect in the labour market by ensuring that they are posted to organisations and firms related to their disciplines; ensure a broad-based understanding of Nigeria as a country and to engender unity; create a platform for graduates to learn and practice  discipline, have an understanding and appreciation of the various cultures in the country and to have the mentality to face the pressures of life after school.
The almost four decades old scheme has witnessed its several ups and downs. Most often than not, it has been bashed even by pundits. The gratuitous killings of 10 Corps members as a result of the post election violence of April 2011 fanned the embers of misgivings some Nigerians hold against the scheme giving rise to a cacophony of voices shouting “scrap the scheme” as it has lost its ‘relevance’. Some viewed NYSC as a threshold to death while others see the twelve months of service as unnecessary waste of precious time stating that the Scheme has ‘outlived’ its usefulness.
In another instance, Onyekaba Charles opined in a document submitted to masterweb that it is no longer a secret that the NYSC has since lost its sense of purpose and value in near all ramifications. The programme is not only an extension of the inequality, injustice and unfairness that has characterised the Nigerian society since time immemorial, but has also paved way for other abnormalities such as corruption and influencing of posting processes, extortions and bribery from students prior to posting.
Others are creation of an illicit quid-pro quo sex trade environment among the officials and female corps members, frustration and negative influence on the norms and values of honorable corps members who had truly wanted to serve the nation, avoidable occasions of death and other misfortunes mostly arising from the need for corps members to visit their families, undue expenses usually encountered by sponsors, friends and relatives who most times have had to borrow in order to meet with the service requirements.
But the significance of the scheme has been boosted by the support of the Nigerian press, especially during the post election violence that killed some corps members, a circumstance that was blamed on security lapses and poor intelligence gathering on the part of security agencies. They added, and rightly too, that the gruesome killings did not in any way vitiate the fact that Corps members approached the election duty with patriotic fervor and responsibility thus conferring great credibility to the whole electoral process. Both local and international observers unanimously applauded the commendable role the Corps members played.
It is against the backdrop of these numerous criticisms that the management of the scheme went back to the drawing board to reinvent a scheme that is tailored to the security and socio-economic realities of the time. It is a truism that no sound economy can be built on the altar of violence and insecurity. This same maxim applies to corps members who will not give their best in the face of threat to their personal security.
Since security is cardinal to the optimal performance of corps members, the Scheme in the first quarter of this year concretized the concept of establishing a Distress Call Centre which if were in place would have mitigated or even averted the mayhem visited on the unfortunate Corps members last year.
The centre has its base at the NYSC National Directorate Headquarters, Abuja. The purpose of this innovation is to assist corps members in getting rapid intervention anytime their security is threatened. The IT-based centre holds the data of all corps members cutting across the three batches, including their telephone numbers as well as that of security agencies, traditional rulers and prominent personalities in all the Corps locations. Any call put to the Centre indicates the name and particulars of the caller with his place of service. In the event of threat to the Corps member, the Centre alerts the nearest security agencies for rapid response.
It is instructive to note that this initiative has in no mean way buoyed the confidence and morale of Corps members in the performance of their duties, since psychologically; they are now placed on a better pedestal to perform their duties without fear of their security.
In other to boost the physical and financial security of Corps members, the NYSC management introduced martial art training into the orientation course content so as to equip them with the requisite skills for self defence. A corollary to the above is the introduction of Skill Acquisition and Entrepreneurship programmes also into the course content in order to raise an army of entrepreneurs that will drive the economy of this nation and not job seekers that will trudge the streets of Nigeria in search of scarcely available jobs.
To institutionalise this, the federal government raised the number of departments in the NYSC from seven to eleven with Department of Skills Acquisition and Entrepreneurship Development as one of the new departments. It is already up and running.
Let me hasten to posit that prior to the formulation of the above laudable policy, the Scheme had been complementing government’s effort at reducing unemployment. In this wise, under NYSC/MDGs War Against Poverty, WAP the NYSC has trained and empowered over one thousand, three hundred and seventy-six corps members in various agro-allied ventures/businesses in the last one year.
An interest free loan of N229,000,000:00 (Two hundred and twenty-nine million, five hundred thousand Naira) had been released to the Corps beneficiaries of the training as soft loans at zero percent interest rate to enable them kick-start their businesses. A mechanism has been put in place to track the performances of these entrepreneurs and gratifyingly, most of them are doing very well in their businesses.
Perhaps, one of the most revolutionary policies of the Scheme in recent times has to do with the new perspective of Corps posting. As a foremost development focused national institution that is responsive to the yearnings of its environment, the Scheme reviewed its posting policy aligning it with the transformation agenda of the Federal Government.
This policy commenced with the 2012 Batch ‘A’ Corps members who in tandem with the new thrust were posted to the four critical sectors of the economy: Education, Healthcare delivery, Agriculture and Infrastructure/Public works. In the long run, this policy will give a veritable boost to the Federal Government’s Universal Basic Education, food security, increase in quantitative and qualitative rural healthcare and improvement of infrastructure.
This sound policy has stopped the antics of some unscrupulous employers who look for cheap labours year in year out.  Corps members’ energy will now be redirected to more productive ventures that will build the economy of the country.
In the final analysis, from the body language of the managers of the Scheme, there is no gainsaying the fact that in the months ahead, the Scheme will continue to leverage and build on the gains so far achieved with a view to repositioning and making it a pragmatic and result oriented Scheme that its stakeholders and indeed Nigerians will be proud of.
Even though complaints have arisen especially corps members who have desired to serve in the city centers and enjoy the attendant comfort and privileges of city life alongside those who have tried unsuccessfully to influence the system, the managers of the reform should not let down as every reform is bound to create some inconvenience to those who are used to the former system.
It is also the desire of many onlookers that even though there is a change of baton at the youth ministry, the new Minister of Youth Development should ensure that he supports the management of the NYSC to continue to drive the reforms to pleasure and realization of the dreams of the founding fathers.