The National Youth Service Corps, NYSC, recently announced a new fee 
for intending corps members, with a stipulation that newly enlisted 
graduates pay N4, 000 for online call-up letters in what the agency has 
termed “computerised mobilisation”. That novel process, enabled by a 
private firm, SIDMACH Technologies Nigeria Limited, in a Public Private 
Partnership, PPP, no doubt will eliminate the rigour of travel to 
schools for letters, a point duly highlighted by Anthony Ani, NYSC’s 
director, Corps Mobilisation.
The NYSC’s explanation—most recently by its director general, Johnson
 Olawumi — that the payment is optional, has not turned off a wave of 
criticisms from Nigerians who understandably view the policy 
exploitative. Widespread concerns have found fillip in the agency’s 
conflicting explanations on what purpose the new charge will exactly 
serve.
While Mr. Ani and the DG said the amount defrays the cost of printing
 the call-up letters, Olubunmi Aderibigbe, NYSC’s director, Press and 
Public Relation, told Nigerians the amount would enhance the “operation 
and provision of infrastructural facilities in all NYSC camps and its 37
 secretariats and offices in the 774 local governments nationwide”.
The decision to computerize the mobilization procedure, a supposedly 
simple process tangled for years by needless bureaucracy, should no 
doubt be encouraged. Yet, as promising as it appears, a N4, 000 price 
tag pricks not a few in a country where poverty remains prevalent and 
income is fleeting and difficult to come by. The claim by the NYSC that 
the policy will remove the risk in travelling long distances for call-up
 letters, is scrappy at best. This is so because corps members will 
still be saddled with traveling even longer and more perilous distances 
to their orientation camps across the country.
If military and paramilitary interns are not billed to maintain their
 training camps, why should NYSC members be asked to do so? And, 
speaking of infrastructure at the camps, what exactly does that entail? 
The NYSC has also claimed the money would be used in providing internet 
access at the camps. Great idea! But at what cost would that be relative
 to the charge per corps member. For an agency with capital budget 
outlay less than a single percent of its entire spending plan, NYSC 
should seek innovative ways to raise more funding if it ever finds vital
 programmes to pursue. It should refrain from imposing irrelevant 
charges on young graduates and their suffering sponsors.
In a nation where scandals compete to outflank another, there is a 
likelihood of promoters of this policy holding back for criticisms to 
abate only to forge on. What is clear regardless, is that NYSC will find
 no justification for this new drive, not even its so-called Public 
Private Partnership. The idea of PPP in Nigeria, as with other 
innovative models-gone-awry, has become a bogus cover for dubious 
government officials who attempt to trump common sense when caught in 
questionable deals. Suffice here is the fatal Immigration recruitment 
overseen early this year by the Interior Minister, Patrick Abba Moro. As
 it became clear, Mr. Moro singlehandedly engineered the tragically 
flawed process of employing more than half a million unemployed 
Nigerians by charging each applicant a thousand naira each even when he 
knew there were no jobs to offer. The minister claimed PPP with a 
company called Drexel Nigeria Limited. The company pocketed nearly a 
billion naira while at least 15 of the applicants died in avoidable 
stampedes across the country.
Mr. Moro has remained a key cabinet member despite the outrage that 
followed. Worse, he has been accused in a recent PREMIUM TIMES’ report 
of conniving with a private firm, Greater Washington Limited, in a 
phoney National Passport delivery service designed to defraud 
unsuspecting passport applicants. Again, the minister rehashed the 
well-known theme of “cutting edge technology and Public Private 
Partnership”.
The investigations by the House of Representatives into this new fee,
 is welcome. The House should clearly establish the essence of the N4, 
000. Overall, whatever new plans there is should not disregard the 
primary aim of the NYSC created in 1973 by the Gowon regime, which was 
to promote cultural exchange and inter-ethnic reintegration after the 
civil war. If the agency has outlived this purpose, let its 
establishment law be reviewed.
A new NYSC should present young graduates yet another opportunity to 
skim off some value and marketable skill for themselves after passing 
through a scruffy university system. Instead of expecting pecuniary 
gains, NYSC should seek to complement the formal education system by 
helping in transforming youth in their care into entrepreneurs instead 
of job seekers.
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