Tag: NYSC

  • A CRITICAL APPRAISAL OF THE “PUBLIC-INTEREST” LAWSUIT SEEKING TO HALT NYSC DEPLOYMENTS TO ALLEGED “HIGH-SECURITY-RISK STATES

    A CRITICAL APPRAISAL OF THE “PUBLIC-INTEREST” LAWSUIT SEEKING TO HALT NYSC DEPLOYMENTS TO ALLEGED “HIGH-SECURITY-RISK STATES

     

    By Sylvester Udemezue

    (1) *INTRODUCTION*

    The recent suit reportedly instituted by Messrs. Olukunle Edun, SAN, and John Aikpokpo-Martins, seeking judicial intervention to prevent the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) from posting corps members to what they describe as “high-security-risk states,” has understandably attracted public sympathy and media attention. At first glance, the suit appears noble, compassionate, and well-intentioned. After all, who would argue against the safety of Nigerian youths? Who would oppose measures aimed at protecting corps members from insecurity? Yet, public discourse must rise above emotions and sentiments. Good intentions, however commendable, do not necessarily translate into sound law, effective governance, workable public policy, or sustainable solutions. The true test of every public-interest action lies not merely in the nobility of its objective, but in the legality, practicality, enforceability, and societal utility of the remedies it seeks. It is against this background that this commentary respectfully examines the conceptual, legal, practical, and policy challenges inherent in the suit.

    My purpose is not to diminish the patriotic motives of the Applicants. Far from it. Rather, it is to interrogate whether the litigation itself is capable of achieving its stated objectives and whether the courts are the proper forum for resolving the issues raised.

    Public-Interest Litigation Must Remain Solution-Oriented. Public-interest litigation occupies an important place in every constitutional democracy. Historically, public-interest suits have expanded civil liberties, promoted governmental accountability, protected vulnerable groups, and strengthened constitutional governance. However, public-interest litigation was never intended to become an avenue for symbolic activism or headline-grabbing interventions that offer little or no realistic pathway toward solving the problem complained of. A lawsuit may attract public applause and media attention, yet contribute virtually nothing to resolving the underlying challenge.

    The ultimate question therefore remains: “Will the reliefs sought, if granted, make Nigeria safer?” If the answer is uncertain, then the utility of the litigation itself becomes questionable.

    (2). *THE FOUNDATIONAL PROBLEM: WHAT IS A “HIGH-SECURITY-RISK STATE”?*

    This is perhaps the most fundamental weakness in the entire action. The suit proceeds on the assumption that there exists an identifiable category known as “high-security-risk states.” One immediately asks: Which states are those? Who designated them? By what legal authority? Under what statute? Pursuant to what regulation? Based on what objective criteria? For what duration? This is because to the best of public knowledge, no Nigerian law presently classifies states into “safe states,” “unsafe states,” “high-risk states,” or “low-risk states.” Neither the Constitution nor the NYSC Act contains any such categorization. No Gazette appears to have established such classifications. No known judicial decision has done so. No statutory agency appears vested with the authority to officially classify Nigerian states in the manner contemplated by the suit. The concept therefore appears more political and descriptive than legal and definitional. Yet courts adjudicate legal rights, legal duties, and legal statuses; not abstract descriptions lacking legal certainty.

    (3). *NIGERIA HAS NO COMPLETELY SAFE STATE*

    Another conceptual difficulty is that insecurity is not confined to any particular region of Nigeria. Kidnapping has occurred in Abuja. Terror attacks have occurred in the Federal Capital Territory. Banditry has occurred in parts of the North-West. Insurgency, banditry and terrorism have affected parts of the North-East and North-West. Cult violence has occurred in the South-South. Communal conflicts, kidnappings and banditry have occurred in North-Central states. Kidnappings and violent crimes have occurred in parts of the South-East and South-West. Indeed, hardly any state can honestly claim absolute immunity from security challenges.

    If insecurity exists in varying forms and degrees nationwide, where exactly should corps members be posted? Would the court be expected to draw a security map of Nigeria? Would it establish categories of risk? Would it update such categories weekly, monthly, or annually?

    These questions reveal the inherent difficulties in the reliefs sought. Who Determines Security Risk? This issue deserves particular emphasis.

    Security assessment is a highly specialized and dynamic exercise. It involves intelligence gathering; threat analysis; military evaluation; operational surveillance; risk forecasting; strategic response planning. These are functions traditionally performed by security agencies and executive authorities.

    (4). *COURTS ARE NOT INTELLIGENCE INSTITUTIONS.*

    Judges are not security analysts. The judicial process is not designed for continuous threat assessment. A courtroom is therefore ill-suited to determining whether Zamfara is more dangerous than Benue, whether Borno is safer than Plateau, or whether Kaduna is presently riskier than the Federal Capital Territory. Such determinations require expertise, information, and operational capacities that courts do not possess.

    (5). *THE SUIT APPEARS TO INVITE THE COURT INTO A POLICY ARENA*

    The Constitution establishes a clear separation of powers. The judiciary interprets law. The legislature makes law. The executive formulates and implements policy. Security deployment decisions are quintessential executive functions. The question of where corps members should be posted, subject of course to applicable laws, is primarily an administrative and policy question. The courts can intervene where rights are clearly violated or where governmental action is unlawful. But where the dispute essentially concerns policy preferences and administrative judgments, judicial restraint becomes necessary. Otherwise, courts risk being transformed into super-administrators, super-security advisers, and super-policy makers. That was never the constitutional design.

    (6). *THE BANKRUPTCY ANALOGY*

    An analogy may help illustrate the point. Suppose a person files an action seeking an order restraining a company from appointing an individual as a director on the ground that the proposed appointee is an undischarged bankrupt. The obvious question would be: Where is the declaration of bankruptcy? Which court declared him bankrupt? When was the order made? A bankruptcy allegation cannot simply be presumed. It must first be established through a recognized legal process. Similarly, before a court can be asked to prohibit deployment to “high-security-risk states,” one would expect some prior legal, statutory, administrative, or authoritative designation identifying those states. Absent such designation, the court is effectively invited to create the classification itself. That is where the conceptual difficulty lies. What Constructive Engagement Preceded The Litigation?

    Another important question concerns process. Litigation should ordinarily be a last resort, not the first. One therefore wonders: Did the Applicants formally engage the NYSC before approaching the court? Did they submit policy memoranda? Did they seek meetings with relevant authorities? Did they propose security reforms? Did they advocate legislative amendments? Did they recommend specific redeployment frameworks? Did they engage the Ministry of Youth Development? Did they consult security agencies? If such engagements occurred, they should be publicly highlighted because they would demonstrate a genuine effort to solve the problem before resorting to litigation. If they did not occur, then legitimate questions arise as to whether litigation was prematurely chosen over dialogue and policy engagement. Public-interest litigation should complement constructive engagement, not replace it.

    (7). *EXISTING REDEPLOYMENT MECHANISMS ALREADY EXIST*

    The suit also appears to overlook an important practical reality. The NYSC already operates redeployment mechanisms. Corps members are not entirely without remedies. Applications for redeployment are routinely considered under various circumstances, including medical grounds; marital grounds; compassionate grounds; and exceptional circumstances. The obvious question therefore is: Are corps members who genuinely face security concerns presently denied consideration? If deficiencies exist, would administrative reform not offer a faster and more practical solution than years of litigation? One must be careful not to create the impression that corps members are completely helpless when existing mechanisms already provide avenues for relief.

    (8). *THE ENFORCEMENT PROBLEM*

    Assuming the Applicants succeed, another challenge emerges. How exactly would the judgment be enforced? Would the NYSC cease deployments to entire states? Would deployment decisions depend on daily security reports? Would a single attack render a state ineligible? Would improved security automatically restore eligibility? Who would make these determinations? The court? The NYSC? The Attorney-General? Security agencies? The practical difficulties appear endless. A remedy that cannot be clearly implemented may ultimately create more confusion than certainty.

    (9). *THE REAL SOLUTION LIES ELSEWHERE*

    The tragedy of insecurity in Nigeria cannot be solved through deployment restrictions. Restricting postings does not eliminate terrorism. It does not stop banditry. It does not dismantle kidnapping syndicates. It does not improve intelligence gathering. It does not strengthen law enforcement. It does not address unemployment. It does not cure governance failures. At best, it manages one consequence of insecurity while leaving the root causes untouched. The real solution lies in comprehensive security reform, improved intelligence architecture, better policing, economic development, stronger institutions, and more effective governance. Those are the measures capable of producing lasting change.

    (10). *CONCLUSION*

    The concern for the welfare and safety of corps members is entirely legitimate and deserves universal support. However, respect for the objective of a lawsuit does not preclude scrutiny of its assumptions, methodology, and practicality. With the greatest respect to the distinguished Applicants, the suit appears to raise more questions than it answers. It seeks reliefs founded upon a classification that has not been clearly defined. It invites the judiciary into a field traditionally occupied by security experts and policy makers. It presents significant enforcement difficulties. It overlooks existing administrative mechanisms. And most importantly, it offers no obvious pathway toward addressing the root causes of insecurity. Public-interest litigation is at its most effective when it produces practical solutions, strengthens institutions, and advances constitutional governance. Where a lawsuit is unlikely to achieve those objectives, society must have the courage to ask difficult questions; not out of hostility to the litigants, but out of commitment to meaningful and lasting solutions.

    Nigeria’s insecurity challenge is real. Its consequences are painful. Its victims deserve protection. But not every public problem is amenable to judicial resolution. Sometimes the most effective remedy lies not in the courtroom, but in constructive engagement, policy reform, institutional strengthening, and responsible governance. That, respectfully, is the conversation we ought to be having.

    (Respectfully,
    Sylvester Udemezue (udems).
    Proctor, The Reality Ministry of Truth, Law and Justice (TRM)
    08021365546. lawmentorng@gmail.com.)

  • NYSC corps members must obey social media laws, says D-G

    Social media

    By Justina Auta/Folasade Akpan

    Abuja, May 28, 2026 (FBN) The Director-General of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), Brig.-Gen. Olakunle Nafiu, says corps members are not exempt from Nigeria’s cyberbullying and social media laws during their mandatory national service year.

    Nafiu said this during an interview programme with the News Agency of Nigeria on Thursday in Abuja, emphasising that corps members remained subject to constitutional provisions and laws regulating online conduct.

    According to him, corps members remain citizens of Nigeria and are fully subject to provisions of the Constitution and other extant laws regulating online conduct, cyber activities and public behaviour nationwide.

    Nafiu explained that allegations of cyberbullying against corps members would be investigated and handled by relevant law enforcement agencies in accordance with the law, regardless of their status as serving corps members.

    He added that the NYSC was not mandated to provide legal representation for corps members involved in criminal or civil matters arising from social media activities and other online engagements.

    “The fact that they are corps members does not absolve them from being citizens bound by the laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    “If someone says you cyberbullied him or her, the police will arrest you with your NYSC identity card and you will bear that responsibility.

    “I am not funded to provide legal representation for you in court.

    “What we do is engage the Legal Aid Council to monitor proceedings,” Nafiu said while explaining the scheme’s responsibilities.

    According to him, the Legal Aid Council can provide pro bono legal services for corps members where necessary, particularly in situations requiring legal support during investigations or proceedings before competent courts.

    Nafiu said the scheme had intensified sensitisation campaigns to educate corps members on responsible use of social media and digital communication platforms amid growing concerns over cyberbullying and online misconduct.

    “The rule of the game has changed. You cannot just go online calling out people because someone can accuse you of cyberbullying,” Nafiu warned corps members.

    He, however, noted that the NYSC had adjusted its communication strategies to reflect changing realities among younger Nigerians participating in the national service programme across different states and communities nationwide.

    Nafiu said the scheme was not opposed to content creation by corps members but encouraged responsible and lawful online engagement, particularly among younger Nigerians participating in the mandatory national service programme.

    “By the end of this year, we will be mobilising only ‘Generation Z’ graduates and we understand the environment they operate in.

    “We know this generation loves content creation and we are not against content, but there must be proper context and responsible engagement,”he said.

    Speaking on election duties, Nafiu described corps members’ participation as ad hoc staff as an important contribution to democratic governance and national development through support for credible electoral processes across Nigeria.

    “It is more noble to serve as election ad hoc staff than merely casting your ballot because you are facilitating credible elections for millions of Nigerians,” Nafiu said.

    He urged corps members to view election assignments as opportunities to contribute directly to strengthening Nigeria’s democratic institutions and governance processes through active participation in credible and transparent electoral activities.

    Nafiu also commended the First Lady, Sen. Oluremi Tinubu, for donating mobile clinics to support the scheme’s medical outreach programmes aimed at improving healthcare delivery within underserved rural communities nationwide.

    According to him, the mobile clinics had improved healthcare delivery during outreach activities by providing facilities for scans, consultations and basic medical tests in underserved communities across Nigeria through the programme.

    “Those mobile clinics have consulting rooms and facilities for scans and tests that we previously referred beneficiaries elsewhere to conduct,” Nafiu explained while discussing improvements in healthcare outreach activities.

    He explained that the clinics were mainly deployed to underserved rural communities as part of ongoing efforts to expand access to healthcare services and medical support for disadvantaged Nigerians across the federation.

    “The objective of our outreach is to reach the unreached and less-served rural dwellers with healthcare initiatives and medical support,” Nafiu said while discussing the goals of the NYSC healthcare outreach programme.

    Nafiu, however, said logistics challenges had limited deployment of the mobile clinics to distant states across the federation because transportation required specialised arrangements, technical support and additional operational funding nationwide for smooth movement.

    According to him, the clinics were currently stationed in Abuja because moving them over long distances required specialised transportation arrangements and additional operational costs beyond the scheme’s available logistical capacity and support.

    “We can conveniently move them to nearby states like Nasarawa, Kaduna and Niger, but taking them to places like Lagos involves major logistics requirements,” Nafiu explained.

    He explained that transporting the mobile clinics to distant locations required the use of flatbed carriers and extensive technical support, making deployments to remote states difficult and financially demanding for the scheme.

    FBN reports that the NYSC, established in 1973, is a Federal Government scheme designed to promote national unity, integration and development through mandatory one-year national service by Nigerian graduates across Nigeria.

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    By Folasade Akpan

    Abuja:  (NAN)/Flowerbudnews :  The National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) has released the timetable for the 2026 Batch ‘A’ Stream Two orientation course for prospective corps members scheduled to take place nationwide across all states.

    The scheme disclosed this in a statement issued by its Director of Information and Public Relations, Mrs Caroline Embu, on Wednesday in Abuja, outlining key dates and guidelines for participants.

    According to the statement, the three-week orientation course will hold simultaneously in all the 36 states of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory for eligible participants nationwide.

    She said the exercise would commence with the reception and registration of prospective corps members on April 22 and end at midnight on April 24 across all orientation camps.

    The NYSC added that the swearing-in ceremony for the prospective corps members would take place on April 24, marking the formal commencement of the orientation programme activities nationwide.

    Embu stated that the orientation course would officially end on May 12, after which corps members would proceed to their respective places of primary assignment across the country.

    The scheme urged all Nigerian graduates mobilised for the service year to ensure safe travel to their respective orientation camps across the country ahead of the programme.

    She reiterated the scheme’s warning against night journeys, advising prospective corps members to prioritise their safety while travelling to orientation camps and other assigned locations nationwide.

    “Prospective corps members are advised to break their journeys once it is 6.00 p.m. and pass the night at any available lodge or secure location nearby.

    “They are to continue their journeys the following morning,” she said, stressing the importance of adhering to safety guidelines issued by the scheme for all participants.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the NYSC orientation course is a compulsory programme designed to prepare Nigerian graduates for the one-year national service programme nationwide.

    The scheme, established in 1973, aims to promote national unity and integration by deploying graduates to states other than their states of origin for national service.(NAN)(www.nannews.ng)

  • NYSC swears in 1,071 corps members in Enugu

    NYSC swears in 1,071 corps members in Enugu

     

    By Flowerbudnews
    The National Youths Service Corps (NYSC), on Friday swore in corps members of the 2025 Batch A Stream 1 set, deployed to Enugu for the one-year mandatory national service.

    The  State Coordinator, Mrs Oluwakemi Awolola gave the figure during the ceremony at the NYSC Orientation Camp, Awgu Local Government Area, Enugu.


    Awolola said that the corps members comprised 471 males and 600 females.

    Congratulating the corps members, she urged them to participate in all the activities in the orientation camp as indiscipline would not be tolerated.

    She commended them for answering the clarion call to national service, adding that the orientation was to give them clear understanding of the NYSC scheme and to acquaint them with empowerment, language and culture of their host communities.

    “Your assessment of your service year start right from the camp, you must obey the rules and respect camp officials as indiscipline would not be tolerated.

    She applauded Gov. Peter Mbah for the recent approval and the commencement of solar borehole project in the orientation camp which was aimed at improving water supply for the corps members and the staff.


    The coordinator also thanked the Awgu Local Government Area Chairman, Mr Uchenna Okolo, for repairing the perimeter fencing and the camp generator as well as clearing the the environment for the corps members.

    Meanwhile, Mbah, represented by the Enugu State Commissioner for Environment, Prof. Sam Ugwu, urged the corps members to contribute positively to national building and to their host communities.

    The governor said that his administration was looking at renovating the orientation camp to conducive training environment.

    He urged the corps members to participate in leadership scheme and entrepreneurial skills.

    Administering the oath of allegiance, the Chief Judge of the state, Justice Raymond Ozoemena, urged the corps members to make proper use of the opportunity the country had given them.

    “Make proper use of the opportunity this country has afforded you to prosper.


    “It is Nigeria that your loyalty belong to, without Nigeria you would not have been where you are today.

    Having come from different places, culture, background, different ethnic groups, you are all here as citizens of one united nation Nigeria,” he said.

     

  • Nafiu Olakunle: NYSC DG disciplined professional – Gov Adeleke

    Nafiu Olakunle: NYSC DG disciplined professional – Gov Adeleke

     

    (Governor Ademola Adeleke of Osun State)

    Flowerbudnews

    Governor Ademola Adeleke of Osun State has described the new Director-General of the National Youth Service Corps, NYSC, Brigadier General Nafiu Olakunle, as a fine and disciplined professional.

    Governor Adeleke also described General Olakunle’s appointment as being in line with managing the nation’s strategic organizations and a recognition of his distinguished military career.

    The Osun governor made this known in a congratulatory message signed by his spokesperson, Olawale Rasheed, on Monday in Osogbo.

    Brigadier General Olakunle, who hails from Ile-Ogbo in Aiyedire Local Government Area of Osun State, is an artillery officer and was recently appointed by President Bola Tinubu as the NYSC DG, replacing Brigadier General Yusha’u Dogara Ahmed.

    Until his appointment, Brig. Gen. Olakunle was the Chief of Staff to the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Olufemi Oluyede, having also served in the same capacity with the late Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Taoreed Abiodun Lagbaja.

    A member of the 47 Regular Course, Nafiu is an artillery officer who graduated from the Armed Forces Command and Staff College and the U.S. Army War College.

    Before he was appointed Chief of Staff to the COAS, he was a Directing Staff at the Army War College, Nigeria.

    The governor, in the message, emphasized Brigadier General Olakunle’s capacity to achieve the mandate of the NYSC by deepening national values in young people and preparing them for future endeavors.

    He noted that the exploits of the Ile-Ogbo-born officer in the military are reassuring and that he will excel in his new role.

    “I’m extremely delighted to learn of the appointment of Brigadier-General Nafiu Olakunle as the Director-General of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC). The appointment is an affirmation of the confidence in the capacity of Brigadier-General Olakunle, and I’m thankful to Mr. President for the opportunity given to one of Osun’s finest citizens.”

    Governor Adeleke, who appreciates President Tinubu for giving yet another Osun indigene the opportunity to contribute to nation-building, urged Brigadier General Olakunle to use the appointment to positively spotlight the state by ensuring the achievement of the NYSC mandate.

    “I wish the NYSC DG a successful tenure, hoping that it will further move the organization forward and bring much glory to the state.”

  • President Tinubu Appoints Brig -Gen. Nafiu Olakunle , DG NYSC

    President Tinubu Appoints Brig -Gen. Nafiu Olakunle , DG NYSC

     

    By Biola Lawal

    Abuja (Flowerbudnews): President Bola Tinubu has appointed Brigadier-General Nafiu Olakunle, an artillery officer in the Nigerian Army as the new Director General of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC).

    Flowerbudnews reports that Brig. Gen.  Olakunle  is a distinguished officer hailing from Ileogbo in the Aiyedire Local Government area of Osun State.

    Indigenes of Osun commended President Tinubu, noting ”this significant appointment marks a moment of great pride not only for Ileogbo, Iwoland, Osun State, but for the nation as a whole”.

    They noted that Brig Gen Olakunle, ”as a deserving individual has been acknowledged for his unwavering dedication, exemplary service, and steadfast commitment to fostering national progress.’:

    The appointment of the Artillery Officer ”is anticipated to usher in a wave of positive change,” noting that  ”Brigadier-General Nafiu Olakunle’s leadership is poised to elevate the NYSC program, reinforcing its pivotal role in fostering unity and empowerment among the youth of Nigeria.’:

    ”Congratulations are in order for Brigadier-General Nafiu Olakunle on this momentous achievement, signifying a noteworthy triumph for Ileogbo, Iwoland, and the broader Osun State community.” Flowerbudnews

  • NYSC swears in 1,200 corps members in Enugu

    NYSC swears in 1,200 corps members in Enugu

    By Flowerbudnews

    The National Youths Service Corps (NYSC), on Friday, swore in 1,200 corps members of the 2024 Batch ‘C’ Stream 1 set, deployed to Enugu for the one-year mandatory national service.

    The NYSC State Coordinator, Mrs Oluwakemi Oluwola, gave the number during the swearing-in ceremony at the NYSC Orientation Camp, Awgu Local Government Area, Enugu State.

    Oluwola said that the corps members comprised 569 males and 631 females.

    She urged the newly sworn-in corps members to participate in all the activities that were compulsory and obey all the rules and regulations.

    Congratulating the corps members, she said that a comprehensive package had been packaged for them.

    According to her, the package include military drills,, citizenship and leadership training, language studies, skill acquisition and entrepreneurship development training among others.

    “You will be co-opted into various committee set up for the smooth operations of the camp, this is meant to give you the opportunity to learn some rudiments of administration and decision making process,” she said.

    The state coordinator lauded Gov. Peter Mbah for releasing the sum of N5 million, which was used in sinking the second borehole in the orientation camp.

    Oluwola applauded the state government for making sure that the orientation camp was returned to the national grid.

    She commended the Awgu Local Government Chairman, Mr Uche Okolo, for grading the access road leading into the camp, which had been in a deplorable condition.

    “The chairman has also sent a bulldozer to clear the intended site for parade ground within the camp so that we can commence minor activities, ” she said.

    Gov. Mbah, represented by the Commissioner for Youths and Sports in the state, Mr Lloyd Ekweremadu welcomed the corps members to the state, where they would commence their individual and collective contributions to the growth and development of the country.

    The governor assured the NYSC management in the state that his administration would continue to carry out the necessary projects in the camp for the comfort of the corps members.

    He urged them to maintain discipline in the camp and participate vigorously in all the activities of the orientation programme.

    Administering the oath of allegiance, the Chief Judge of Enugu State, Justice Raymond Ozoemena, represented by Justice R. O. Odugu urged the corps members to maintain discipline at all times.

    Ozoemena urged the corps members to serve their fatherland faithfully, adding that with the lifting of ban on Ministry, Department and Agency (MDA) accepting corps members posted to them, he said that no MDA should turn back any corps member.

    He applauded the governor for the good work he was carrying out in the camp.

  • TSF commends President Tinubu’s intervention in raising corps members’ allowance to cushion economic challenges.

    TSF commends President Tinubu’s intervention in raising corps members’ allowance to cushion economic challenges.

     

    By Iyiola Olalere

    The Tinubu Stakeholders Forum (TSF) has commended the Federal Government’s recent approval of the increment of corps members’ monthly allowance from N33,000 to N77,000, effective from July 2024.

    This strategic intervention by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is aimed at cushioning the effects of the current economic challenges and providing much-needed financial relief to Nigerian youths participating in the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) scheme.

    In a statement signed by its Chairman, Ahmad Sajoh, and Secretary, Afolabi Josiah, the Forum praised the government’s swift action.

    The statement reads: “We at the Tinubu Stakeholders Forum (TSF) wholeheartedly applaud President Bola Tinubu’s administration for the remarkable step of increasing corps members’ allowances because it is a forthright thing to do.

    “This significant raise comes at a critical time and is a clear indication of the administration’s commitment to supporting Nigerian youths and mitigating the economic challenges they face.”

    The increase, announced by the NYSC’s Acting Director of Information and Public Relations, Caroline Embu, was officially communicated through a letter from the National Salaries, Incomes and Wages Commission, signed by its Chairman, Mr. Ekpo Nta. The adjustment follows the enactment of the National Minimum Wage (Amendment) Act 2024, which raised the national minimum wage to N70,000, with the corps members’ allowance adjusted accordingly.

    Before this intervention, corps members received N33,000 monthly, based on the previous minimum wage revision in 2019. The new allowance, which takes effect from July 2024, is a much-needed boost that underscores the government’s dedication to improving the welfare of corps members, many of whom are fresh graduates transiting into the workforce.

    The Forum further acknowledged the efforts of Brigadier-General Yusha’u Ahmed, the Director General of the NYSC, whose advocacy visit to the Chairman of the National Salaries, Incomes and Wages Commission played a pivotal role in securing this robust welfare package for corps members.

    In the words of TSF, “This approval could not have come at a better time. It represents yet another landmark achievement of the Tinubu administration, addressing the financial needs of our youth and reinforcing the government’s promise to improve the living standards of Nigerians across all sectors.”

    The TSF also expressed optimism that this measure will not only bring immediate relief to corps members but also motivate them to serve the nation with renewed vigour and enthusiasm.

    “We commend the federal government for its proactive response to the economic challenges, and we are confident that this increase will inspire corps members to continue contributing meaningfully to national development during their service year,” the statement added.

    The Forum urged all relevant stakeholders, including the NYSC management, to ensure seamless implementation of the new allowance and to continue advocating for policies that benefit Nigerian youths. TSF reiterated its support for the Tinubu administration’s ongoing efforts to prioritize youth empowerment, economic growth, and national unity.

    The Forum equally enjoins persons, agencies, and organizations employing the services of Youth Corp members to support the presidential gesture by investing more on the welfare and well-being of the NYSC members in their service. The Hallmark of the President Bola Ahmed Tinubu government is that it emphasizes collective action to achieve the desired transformation of the country.

    TSF calls on all Nigerians to support the efforts of the government, especially in the area of youth development, which is an investment in the future of the country. This informs many of the laudable initiatives of this government in youth development and skills acquisition.

    “The increase in the corps members’ allowance is one of the many initiatives by the Tinubu administration designed to alleviate the economic pressures faced by citizens. It stands as further evidence of the President’s resolve to fulfil his campaign promises and build a more prosperous and equitable Nigeria,” the statement concluded.

     

  • No graduate of SLT was denied registration in Enugu – NYSC Coordinator

    No graduate of SLT was denied registration in Enugu – NYSC Coordinator

     

    By Flowerbudnews

    The Coordinator, National Youths Service Corps (NYSC), Enugu State, Mrs Christiana Salmwang, says no graduate of Science and Laboratory Technology (SLT) was denied registration during the 2024 Batch B Stream two orientation programme.

     

    Salmwang made the clarification during a press conference on Tuesday at the NYSC orientation camp, Awgu in Enugu.

    She said that all the 101 SLT graduates from various institutions sent to Enugu State for the 2024 Batch B Stream two NYSC orientation programme were duly documented and registered alongside their colleagues at the orientation camp.

     

    The press conference was called following the unfounded allegation by the National Association of Nigeria Students (NANS).

     

    NANS alleged that graduates of Science and Laboratory Technology (SLT) from Polytechnics were denied registration due to absence of Professional Registration Certification with the National Institute for Science Laboratory Technology (NISLT).

     

    Salmwang, who dismissed the allegations of none-registration of SLT graduates, explained with evidence of documentation and records, adding that no SLT graduates of any institution was denied registration.

     

    “None of the SLT graduates was denied registration, they were fully registered without demanding for any kind of professional certificate.

     

    “All the 101 males and females, graduates of SLT from all diverse institutions were duly registered for the orientation programme,” she said.

     

    Some of the corps members, who are graduates of SLT programme from various institutions confirmed that they were not denied registration or asked to present any licence from any professional body as condition for access into the camp.

     

    Mr Ben Jiji from Benue State Polytechnic, Ugbokolo, said that he was not asked to present any professional certificate during their orientation programme registration.

     

    Miss Margret Benjamin from Rivers State Polytechnic said that the registration was seamless as she was registered like every other graduate in the camp without any professional certificate.

     

    Miss Blessing Ikegwuonu from Institute of Management Technology (IMT), Enugu, added that she was not aware of such requirement during the registration as no NYSC official demanded any kind of professional certificate from her.

     

    Mr Ayodeke Wahab from Ogun State Institute of Technology explained that his registration at Awgu orientation camp was stressed free.