As the nation’s security situation worsen, the Federal Government announced that National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) members are no longer assigned to states that are considered risky.
Several corps members have been abducted in various parts of the country during their one-year required national service, raising concerns about the scheme’s long-term viability.
However, Minister of Youth Jamila Ibrahim claims that the scheme has taken precautions to ensure the safety of NYSC members, including placing them solely in safe states.
“As an immediate intervention of the government and the NYSC as an agency, we have actually stopped posting corps members to the very unsafe states,” Jamila said on Channels Television’s current affairs show Sunday Politics.
“We have been doing it. We have been doing it in the past. There are states we have not been posting corps members to to ensure their safety,” she added.
According to her, the security of corps members requires collaboration with other agencies of government.
“When it comes to security matters, it is a multi-sectoral approach. So, it is not the NYSC alone and the ministry that is involved. We are working with security outlets to ensure corps members are safe,” the minister maintained.
“We are also working on group transportation strategies for them to ensure that they are transported to and from camps safely and to their destinations.”
The minister said the Federal Government is working on reforming the NYSC scheme to reflect the present realities of the nation, particularly in the area of their allowance.
“When it comes to remuneration, we are looking at the holistic funding of the NYSC. You are all aware that we have announced a reform of the NYSC scheme itself. We want the scheme to go beyond being a social programme of the government,” she added.
“The reforms will actually transform the NYSC into a revenue-generating agency and prepare corps members for the job market…”