Sunday 11 September 2011

Academy to train NYSC members on self defence

Academy to train NYSC members on self defence Martial Arts and Self -defence Academy (MASDA), is to train future National Youth Service Corps members on the art of self-defence, Mr. Richard Uboh-Ekon, the Combatant- General of the Academy said on Sunday. Uboh-Ekon told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja that the training was meant to equip the youths on how to defend themselves in times of crisis. He said the academy was discussing the details of the training with the management of the scheme. ``Our men are on ground ready to commence the defensive training for corps members to enable them to defend and protect themselves during crisis,’’ he said. Uboh-Ekon commended the former NYSC Director-General, Brig- Gen. Maharazu Tsiga, for his favourable disposition towards the project. He said that the academy, located in Karu, Nasarawa State, had trained more than 700 youths, aged 20 to 32, who would be deployed to different NYSC orientation camps to help in training corps members. Uboh-Ekon said corps members would be trained in the art of taekwondo, judo, boxing and wrestling, among others and explained that the training would neither be sports nor military in nature.
Corps member donates 100 helmets to commercial cyclists Okorite Isokariari gave drivers 1000 bins SEPTEMBER 11, 2011 - 6:22AM | BY VALERIE ANOFOCHI Okorite Isokariari, a corps member in Olorunda Local Government Area of Osun, on Saturday, donated 100 safety helmets to commercial motorcyclists in Osogbo. Isokariari said that the donation was borne out of the danger and risk associated with the business. He observed that many commercial motorcyclists in the state capital rode without using safety helmets, adding that the lack of funds was responsible for their inability to purchase them. He urged well-meaning Nigerians to donate more helmets to assist financially handicapped commercial motorcyclists. Isokariari, with NYSC number OS/10c/0382 and attached to the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) Osogbo, said that the gesture was part of his Community Development Service. The corps member also distributed 100 trash bins to commercial minibus drivers as a way of keeping the state capital clean. He urged the beneficiaries to keep the bins in their vehicles. In his remark, the state Chairman of Motorcycle Transport Union of Nigeria, Gbenga Ajenifuja, commended the initiative of the corps member and urged the beneficiaries to make judicious use of the helmets. FRSC Zonal Commander, Albert Moore, urged all motorcycle riders to always wear safety helmets. Moore, who was represented at the occasion by the Zonal Head of Motor Vehicle Administration, Cecilia Alao, said that the directive was for the benefit of the users. Some of the beneficiaries commended the corps member for his gesture. Nurudeen Alatise, a beneficiary, urged the officials of the local government to always remember the less privileged in their area. Another beneficiary, Suleiman Omotoso, expressed appreciation for the kind gesture, describing the donation as an answer to his prayer. Omotosho, an orphan, admitted that it was against traffic rule to ride motorcycle without a helmet, but said that his lean financial purse prevented him from purchasing one. He promised to always make use of it whenever he rode his motorcycle.

Tuesday 6 September 2011

NYSC gets new DG

Tsiga bows out as Okore-Affia becomes new NYSC DG By Nats Odaudu Submitted by peterakpochafo on Tue, 09/06/2011 - 23:00 The former director-general of the National Youth Service Corps, NYSC, Gen. Maharazu Tsiga, yesterday formally bowed out as the 15th chief executive officer of the 38-year-old organisation, as Brigadier General Okore-Affia Nnamdi becomes the new director-general. It was an unforgettable moment as encomiums were poured on the out gone chief executive by staff describing the one they fondly called “Ochendo” as wonderful for the un-precedented leadership their former boss provided in the organisation. In his farewell speech, Tsiga was full of appreciation to President Goodluck Jonathan who gave him all the support to be able to deliver during his tenure. He also thanked the members of staff and management whom he described to his successor as the best work force anywhere in Nigeria. He enumerated his achievements as the 15th chief executive of NYSC to include the upward review of corps member’s allowances; successful participation of corps members in the 2011 general elections; training of corps members in the NYSC MDGs War Against Poverty progamme; introduction of Corps Health Insurance Scheme and employment of ex corps members,who won the president’s honours award, among many others. As for his challenges, he regretted the inability of both the state and local authorities to providing appropriate security for corps members. In his response, the new director-general, Brigadier General Okore-Affia Nnamdi said he hoped the same support given to the out gone DG would be given to him also in order to be able to move the NYSC to greater heights.

Monday 29 August 2011

NYSC Scheme And National Unity

NYSC Scheme And National Unity Mon, 29/08/2011 - 10:36pm The National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) scheme was established to ensure national consciousness, youth leadership skills for nation building, meaningful interactions and enduring relationships as well as national integration and unity among the various ethnic groups in Nigeria Although the programme, arguably, has not failed to achieve over the decades, nonetheless, these are definitely not the best of times for the current management and staff of the 38-year-old NYSC, introduced by the Gen. Yakubu Gowon military administration in the aftermath of the unfortunate civil war that raged between 1966 and 1970. The current pressure on the scheme is informed by the increasing insecurity of lives of its corps members due to killings, bomb attacks and kidnappings in certain volatile states in parts of the conutry, including Borno, Jigawa, Taraba, Imo, Kaduna, Kano, Plateau and Bauchi to which graduate youths are being posted to participate in the one-year mandatory national service. There have been discordant calls on the appropriate authorities and prominent stakeholders, to either phase out or restructure the programme, vis-a- vis the guidelines for posting, welfare package, issues of security of lives as well as the deployment of corps members to places of primary assignment after mobilisation at the orientation camps, among others. Granted, that the federal government consequently has set up an investigative panel on the post-election violence, headed by Sheikh Ahmed Lemu to probe series of violent attacks that dotted the landscape at the time, and make recommendations for possible implementation, conflicting pronouncements, emanating from the leadership of NYSC at its national headquarters in Abuja, over guidelines on redeployment of corps members to preferred states are not helping matters in respect of re-assuring them and their parents or guardians that the nation has their interest at heart. An earlier memo from the office of the NYSC director-general, Brig.-Gen. Maharazu Tsiga, “In the light of the security uncertainty in Bauchi State, the NYSC management has considered it fit to waive all due process to expedite action on relocation” Yet, on realising that scores of serving and prospective corps members have kept seeking re-deployment to other states, the NYSC again, made a U-turn on the previous directive, saying it appeared to have encouraged corps members from all states of the federation, including the FCT, to besiege the national headquarters seeking relocation “for the flimsiest of reasons” The director-general thus, ostensibly stated in another memo: “All prospective corps members must proceed to their respective camps immediately. Relocation matters will be handled through the established procedure from their states of deployment:’ While one readily agrees with the leadership of the NYSC, that allowing corps members to serve in their states of origin will be against the NYSC code, the officials still need to realise the fact that they may be wrong in describing reasons advanced by concerned corps members seeking re-deployment as “flimsiest”. Human lives are precious, and once lost, they are simply irreplaceable! Perhaps we all need to ask ourselves this pointed question: Which rational parent or guardian will carelessly allow their sons or daughters in whom they have invested so much from birth, sheepishly march into the den by faceless terrorists to snuff life out of them in seconds while serving Nigeria outside their states of origin? To further impress it on the government that things are really falling apart with the scheme of recent, at least security-wise, the apparent lack of confidence in the capability of the state security apparatus has compelled the authorities of the University of Maiduguri (UNIMAID), in Bomo State, following alleged threat letters from the Boko Haram sect, to shut down the institution indefinitely, while many non-natives are leaving the troubled state in droves for dear lives. Government, therefore, needs to take urgent proactive measures to resolve the Boko Haram wahala before it gets out of the hand. Most politicians with inordinate ambitions seeking political power at all costs for their selfish ends but masquerading as patriotic leaders must be told bluntly to stop their age-long hide-and-seek disruptive tendencies and outright hypocrisy in the form of inciting statements and disposition which surreptitiously fuel trouble across the land. The NYSC national headquarters, for now, should give express approval to requests of many corps members seeking re-posting to other states considered “safe”. These officials should stop playing chess with the lives of the nation’s youth. Continuing doing this will only encourage the generality of Nigerians to lose interest in the NYSC scheme completely. O.Kayode is CEO, Wordkraft Communications Limited Lagos

Sunday 28 August 2011

NYSC evacuees redeployed to South-West states

NYSC evacuees redeployed to South-West states
By Leke Baiyewu
Sunday, 28 Aug 2011

Forty-six members of the National Youth Service Corps from Ogun State that were evacuated from Bauchi State following the post-election violence have been redeployed to some South-West states.
The state NYSC Coordinator, Mr. Olayide Adeniran, told SUNDAY PUNCH that 46 of the affected NYSC members who received their letters of redeployment last week were reposted to various places of their primary assignment.
He said, “The national directorate of the NYSC has been on top of the situation since the occurrence. The corps members had a delay in their redeployment process due to misinformation.”
The Ogun State government, just like other southern states, had ordered the evacuation of its indigenes from Bauchi State, shortly after the April general elections, following a post-election crisis that left 10 corps members dead and several others injured.
No fewer than 150 corps members were brought into Abeokuta, the state capital, on April 25, 2011.
The then Commissioner for Environment, Dr. Olukoya Adeleke-Adedoyin, however, said about 400 corps members were reportedly trapped in Bauchi and that some of them had found their way home, leaving 150 others for the state to rescue.
One of the evacuees, who pleaded anonymity, told SUNDAY PUNCH that the 46 redeployed corps members were those in Batch ‘A’ only and that those in the Batch ‘C’were excluded.

Corp Member May Be Among Dead Terror Suspects

Nigeria: Corp Member May Be Among Dead Terror Suspects

Abdullahi Tasiu Abubakar
28 August 2011


A member of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) may be among the terror suspects killed by the army in Adamawa State during Thursday's deadly attack on the central town of Gombi, sources told Sunday Trust yesterday.
A gang of about 30 gunmen raided Gombi town in broad daylight on Thursday, attacking police stations and banks and killing both security personnel and civilians.
About 18 persons, including at least six policemen and three suspected gunmen, were killed during the incident, which the Chief of Army Staff, Lt Gen O. A. Ihejirika, described as a terrorist attack.
Sources told Sunday Trust in Yola that one of the suspected gunmen killed by the army during the encounter was a serving member of the NYSC who was posted to Gombi to teach at a day secondary school.
Sources claimed that he was seen among the gunmen while they were operating in the centre of the town before an army reinforcement sent from Yola gunned him down.
Sources in Gombi claimed that an NYSC identity card was found in his pocket and that he had even participated in the weekly Community Development (CD) assignment earlier in the morning before the afternoon deadly attack.
Sources at the NYSC office in Yola said officials were making efforts to liaise with the army to recover his corpse but that the army had asked them to write formally requesting for the body.
No NYSC official was willing to speak about the matter on record because on were still uncertainties surrounding the issue.
One source told Sunday Trust that when the chief of army staff came to Yola on Friday, some NYSC officials tried to meet him along with the Brigade Commander in Yola to seek the release of the body; but that they were told to make a formal request in writing.
The army spokesman in Yola, Lt. Olukoya Victor, said he could neither confirm nor deny the story because he had not yet been briefed on the identities of the dead suspects or on a request for the release of any of the bodies.
"Honestly, I am yet to be notified of the full identities of the killed suspects. I know that full identification had been ordered, but I haven't been briefed yet," he told Sunday Trust yesterday.
The army had killed two of the suspects while the police had killed one--all of whose bodies were displayed to journalists on Friday.
State police commissioner Adenlere Shinaba, had then told a news conference that police had recovered only two mobile phones, one Motorola walkie-talkie, one camcorder and N5,000 from the dead suspect.
Police spokesperson, Altine Daniel told Sunday Trust yesterday that the suspect killed by the police was not a corps member. She said considering both his features and looks, he could not be a serving corps member.
During his visit to Yola at the weekend, the chief of army staff described both the Gombi raid and the bomb attack on the United Nations' offices in Abuja as terrorist acts.
He said the army would play its role actively in bringing to an end such kind of acts in Nigeria.

Saturday 27 August 2011

In defence of Tsiga

Nigeria: In Defense of Tsiga Tijjani 27 August 2011 Brigadier General Maharazu Tsiga had been in the eye of the storm following unpleasant experiences in recent past. Despite the good record the man had set for himself through the years, some public commentators chose to turn a blind eye and instead pretend as if nothing good had come out of his tenure as the Director General of NYSC. Two of such challenges in reference include kidnapping of corps members and post-election crisis. Kidnapping of corps members was one test that really hit the whole management of the scheme for it has never happened before. Though Gen. Tsiga stood on his feet to make sure that those corps members were released unharmed, little was mentioned of his effort even when that was successfully attained. Also the post - election violence that led to the killing of corps members was one challenge that almost threw the NYSC scheme off balance. Needless to say, the whole nation was saddened. Though not in any way his undoing, rather that of the security that Tsiga trusted to do their part, the blame was heaped on him with hundreds calling for his head. Those who castigated him at that time should know that the security of everybody lies with the state and all other relevant security agencies. He has no power over the security operations of any state where these corps members are posted and can only work in tandem with those saddled with the responsibility which he does prior to every posting. Moreover, he has demonstrated tremendous concern for their welfare. It is for this reason that he availed corps members with his direct phone lines so that good communication can be maintained between them in order to know what is happening to them at all times. The NYSC was established on 22nd May 1973 (thirty seven years ago). It cannot claim to be the only government parastatal that has been able to remain relevant since inception, but thankfully, it is not one of those that have become moribund. Therefore, the leadership of Marahazu Ismaila Tsiga, as enunciated above, has helped to ensure that the NYSC has remained focused on its mandate despite the challenges. Achievements of the NYSC since the coming of the present DG can be clarified from a five point policy directive: Also commendable is Gen.Tsiga's resuscitation of regular visits to all states and revival of regular management meetings to put heads together. In his time, the issue of honouraria to staff was moved to another level thereby boosting the moral of NYSC Staff most especially during orientation exercises. Tsiga made possible the implementation of new allowance to corps members. He has distinguished himself in the Nigerian Army. He is a proud recipient of the FSS, MSS, DSS awards of the Army. Like majority of his predecessors who had three years of tenure, it is most likely that this soldier gentleman can still deliver great services to the Nigerian nation through the ambits of the NYSC. Lastly, his tenure will be remembered by those sincere enough to admit, for a lot of transformation both on corps members and staff welfare. Tijjani wrote from Borgu Local Government, Niger State

Wednesday 24 August 2011

NYSC state coordinator urges youth corps members to access loan scheme

NYSC state coordinator urges youth corps members to access loan scheme
August 24, 2011

The state coordinator of the National Youth Service Corps in Enugu State, Joshua Olowookere, has urged corps members to access the ₦500 million entrepreneurship development fund during their service year.
Mr Olowookere told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Enugu on Tuesday that the fund, set up by the federal government, was to aid corps members start projects that would enhance their lives after service.
According to him, the basic requirement from any serving corps member is a feasibility study of what they intend to do and how they intend to do it.
He added that even if a corps member intended to relocate to his or her village to realise the project, the NYSC could approve of it and empower him or her to do the job while serving.
"This is the time corps members can think of what they can do on their own. The country's Vision 20:2020 programme has to start from the scratch.
"Part of my advice to them during camp orientation was to disorientate them from the white collar job idea and engage them in practical ways of achieving things in life," Mr Olowookere said.
He urged serving corps members to grab the opportunity provided by the federal government to earn a living after service.

Tuesday 23 August 2011

The future of NYSC

The future of NYSC
on AUGUST 23, 2011

THE three weeks I spent in the NYSC Orientation camp in Argungu, Kebbi State in 2002 were some of the best weeks of my life. A Lagos ‘boy’ who schooled in Delta, I used to think that the sun rose and set in the South. So you can understand my surprise at the wonderful things and people I discovered during the NYSC orientation and later as a year-long resident of Birnin Kebbi, the capital of Kebbi.

It was my first practical training on the plurality, vastness and beauty of this country; and it provided me too with the opportunity to shed some of the rather dangerous stereotypes I had acquired over the years.

But none of it would have happened if I hadn’t been part of the NYSC scheme. Chances are that my worldview would have still remained limited and some of the great friendships of my life wouldn’t have happened. So whenever the NYSC issue comes up, I am always emotional about it. And lately there have been no shortages of conversations about what to do with the NYSC, to make it deliver on its original mandate, and much more.

These debates were triggered off by the killing of nine youth corps members in Bauchi and Kaduna states during the post-election violence that erupted in parts of the country. The fact that youth corps members had played a vital role in the success of the 2011 general elections which were adjudged to be the fairest since the return of democracy in 1999 did not in any way shield them from attacks.

The death of the corps members naturally caused furore and drove home the urgency for reforming the NIYSC. But like most Nigerian debates, everyone has an opinion on what the best strategies should be and what should constitute the key ingredients of the reforms. From the heated conversation, however, one could glean some common concerns.

These include: How successful has the scheme been in delivering on its primary mandate of serving as a platform for national integration?

More than 40 years after the civil war that led to its institution and 38 years after its setting up, is the scheme still relevant? Does the scheme serve any practical purpose in preparing the corps members to face modern day challenges like unemployment? Is it possible to refocus the scheme on current national challenges, while still delivering on its original mandate?

As the debate was raging, a fresh batch of university and polytechnic graduates were being called up by the NYSC, just as the new administration was taking shape with the appointment of ministers. It thus seemed as if the questions raised in the debate were being directly posed to the new Minister of Youth Development, Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, in whose portfolio the scheme falls. Incidentally, he assumed duty at the Ministry when the newly deployed corps members were just about rounding off their one-month orientation exercise. In keeping with President Goodluck Jonathan’s charge to hit the ground running, the Minister hit the road to visit some camps to see things for himself and personally give his gospel of transformation to the corps members. The Minister visited the camps in Nasarawa State and Kubwa in the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja. Mallam Adullahi was not oblivious of the discussions going on about the NYSC. In fact, just before the trip to the orientation camps, the Minister had attended the first meeting of a brain trust, made up of top experts and professionals on youth development, which he set up to help him deliver on his mandate. Mallam believes that one person or institution cannot claim to have all the answers and that these days there are more answers out of government than in it. At the meeting, the issue of the NYSC came up again and again, and while there was no consensus on one grand approach, it was generally agreed that the scheme is in need of reforms.

It was this gospel of reforms the minister took to the NYSC camps. In Lafia, he told the corps members that refocusing of the scheme will go more than just ensuring the security of corps members. “Security is a very important issue but the kind of reforms we plan must be able to bring huge returns on the investment, not only to the participating youth corps members but also to Nigeria as a country,” he stated. The thinking of the Minister was that while security is the current concern driving the call for the restructuring of the NYSC, any reform of the scheme will need to go deeper than just ensuring the safety of corps members if it is to provide quality returns on the huge funds invested in it yearly. The Minister hinted on the direction the planned reform would go when he stated that “we think that national integration is no longer enough justification for the NYSC. We have to also start to think of the role that the scheme can play in the President’s agenda for national transformation”.

The NYSC was founded about 38 years ago after a bloody civil war had left the country polarised. General Yakubu Gowon, the then Head-of-State, initiated the scheme as one of the strategies to achieve national reconciliation and heal the wounds of the war. Over the years, the NYSC has fulfilled this vision by producing broad-minded Nigerians who have become more knowledgeable about their country and familiar with other cultures and people, apart from their own. This role has no doubt deepened integration and in spite of our contentious politics, produced Nigerian citizens with a pan-Nigerian outlook.

Gen. Gowon deserves kudos for making national integration one of the key goals of the NYSC, but the challenges facing the country, especially the youth today are deeper and more complex than integrating the different segments of our society. The number one concern of young Nigerians today is lack of jobs. Among graduates, this is usually the result of low capacity, or not having the right kind of training that the market requires. It has got so bad that if a reputable company or government agency should advertise 10 vacancies, tens of thousands of applicants are likely to turn up. No nation can make real progress when its most important resource, its youthful population, is out of work.

Resolving this low capacity puzzle will take a multi-sectoral approach, with the Ministry of Education playing the lead role. It may require reviewing our current curriculum to prioritize training that will produce job creators rather than job seekers. But that is the world as it should be. What can we do now? What role can the NYSC play to help close the skill gap and prepare our young graduates for a life of productivity and employment? Should it be used as a finishing school where graduates in camp are provided additional training to adequately prepare them for life after service?

These are some of the questions that come up in the debate about what to do with the NYSC. Whatever shape the reforms will take, one thing is sure and that is the coming makeover of the scheme will be deep-rooted and will ensure that Nigerians and Nigeria get real value for the huge investment in it.



Julius Ogunro is Special Assistant on Media to the Minister of Youth Development

Monday 8 August 2011

NYSC: Success Story Amidst Crisis

NYSC: Success Story Amidst Crisis
Submitted by James Uzondu
on Mon, 08/08/2011


With the current security challenges facing the country, the National Youth Service Corps, NYSC, has experienced a rather troubled period with several calls for its proscription or realignment, but the ability of the scheme to properly manage the challenges has only gone further to prove critics wrong and expose the outstanding leadership qualities of the director general. - By George Emine
Following the security challenges that Nigeria has been contending with in recent past, the National Youth Service scheme has come under severe crisis, with many calling for its proscription or realignment. This is because Nigerians were generally worried about the tide of killings, kidnapping and bombings in some parts of the north, following the post-election violence, the recent kidnap of five corps members in Rivers State, and the Boko Haram threat.While the calls for its proscription continued, others suggested that this year, especially the 2011 Batch B corp members, should not be posted to the crisis areas in the north and the south-south. There were also suggestions in some quarters that the exercise be suspended completely until the nation overcomes the present security challenges. But amidst all these calls and worries, and in the face of the obvious security challenges that the nation currently contends with, the scheme has continued unhindered.The crisis has clearly overshadowed the contributions made by the corps members in different areas such as education, health and rural development through their community development programmes as well as their primary assignment. It therefore came as a surprise when the posting of the 2011 Batch “B" corps members was announced last month, and corps members were posed to the northern parts of the country. Nigerians expressed fears and worry that action might be the beginning of the failure of the scheme and most especially, the director general, Brigadier General M. I. Tsiga, who has remained adamant in his belief that the scheme was still as worthwhile now, as it was at inception some 25 years ago.Things almost got to a head when the authorities of the Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba Akoko in Ondo State for instance, protested the posting of its graduates to states in the north. Such fear was birthed due to the fact that a graduate of the institution, Mr. Kehinde Jehleel Adeniji, who was serving in Bauchi State, was killed during the post election violence that erupted in some states. A statement by the Institution’s Public Relations Officer, PRO, Mr. Sola Imoru, said the, “institution is still traumatised by the death of one of its alumni. The university notices with dismay, that some of its graduates were still posted to those violence-prone states, including Bauchi, where Adeniji was mercilessly hacked to death, without sufficient guarantee of their safety by the NYSC.” Also, traditional rulers in the oil rich Niger Delta region also called on the federal government to either scrap the scheme or restrict service to the states of origin of the corps members, saying it was really painful that corps members became the target for attack by rioters.According to the statement, the university had received various calls from parents and guardians of graduating students, and some of them too, about their apprehension in being posted to those states. Consequently, the university asked that its graduates should not be posted to the crisis states in order to guarantee their safety and assuage the anxiety of the students and their parents.But in all these, the director general proved to be on top of the situation, dousing all fears. For instance, in view of the insecurity caused by the continuing Boko Haram insurgence, Brigadier General, Maharazu Tsiga, ordered that he could not allow the corps members to remain in the state that is being fled by even the residents. He said he was encouraged by the courage of the corps members, who, despite the pressures from their respective homes, kept calm till the end of the two weeks orientation exercise. But expressing so much confidence in the DG who most corps members see as a father, about 140 members of the corps members that participated in the orientation exercise, had surprisingly insisted on staying behind in Maiduguri State against the fears being expressed by their parents and relatives for their life, so they were posted to areas outside the crisis zone in the state.Instead of being deterred, the director general of the scheme has continued to reaffirm his commitment to make sure the scheme works. He has also taken it upon himself to ensure that the corps members’ welfare is adequately taken care of. He has made it a point of duty to ensure that all stakeholders are made to be committed to the scheme. The security challenges which has most times been over bloated by mischief makers, has only become to him a challenge to overcome. The 2011 batch B’ Orientation provided an avenue for accessing the success of the campaign which the director general had taken to all stakeholders including state governors. Many governors naturally threw away the outcry against the scheme and instead pledged their support for its success.According to the Ekiti State governor, Dr Kayode Fayemi, despite the challenges encountered by the programme, it was still worthy of being sustained. The governor therefore, charged employers not to reject corps members posted to them for primary assignments.The Bauchi State governor, Mallam Isa Yuguda, whose state was virtually blacklisted by parents and guardians of corps members, also directed local government council chairmen in the state to ensure adequate security for NYSC members posted to their domains. Governor Yuguda said his government would give priority to corps members’ welfare, adding that the state government would not condone any act of lawlessness in any guise. This was coming after a seeming imbroglio between the NYSC national headquarters and the state, over issues bothering on the welfare of corps members.The Oyo State governor, Senator Abiola Ajimobi, also assured corps members in the state of adequate security, just as he directed the 33 local government councils to provide corpers’ lodges for serving members in their respective localities. Speaking at the official closing ceremony of the orientation camp for 2011 Batch ‘B’ corps members at Iseyin, Ajimobi said the present administration was, as a matter of policy, committed to greater comfort and security of corps members, in view of their selfless and patriotic service to the nation.In a similar vein, the Kano State government also called on companies and organisations not to reject members of NYSC, saying their service was for the humanity and essential tools for nation’s building. The state governor, Dr Musa Kwankwaso, said the administration would not be happy with public agencies, local government and companies who rejected corps members, noting that these were people that would hold the nation in future.The Kwara State governor, Alhaji Abdulfatah Ahmed, said the state government had put adequate apparatus in place to checkmate crisis in the state. Also, the Katsina State government has appealed to all stakeholders of the NYSC, especially the host communities, to ensure that corps members were provided with needed environment, to enable them to contribute their quota to the socio-economic development of the state. The state governor, Alhaji Ibrahim Shema, made the appeal at the official closing ceremony of the Batch ‘B’ 2011 orientation course for corps members at the state NYSC orientation camp in Katsina. He urged the corps members to actively participate in the community development service, to enable them to leave lasting footprints in their places of primary assignments.Today, the National Youth Service Scheme has become the beautiful bride especially to international agencies who troop to its headquarters to seek partnership with it. The US ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. Terrence P Mcculley while paying a courtesy visit to the headquarters of the NYSC in Abuja, commended the scheme, saying, “through the role played by the NYSC during the polls, the scheme had distinguished itself,” and that he was impressed by the commitment and patriotism demonstrated by the corps members, especially those engaged for election duties.After a long struggle, the NYSC members who were receiving a paltry N9, 775.00 are now receive N19, 800.00 as allowance with effect from March 2011. But despite the success, the director general said his dream is to see that every corps member receives N50,000 monthly before he leaves office. The accolades have also continued to pour in for the director general who incidentally is the first DG who passed through the service himself. Recently, the center for democratic governance in Africa, gave the amiable director general a distinguished Service Award (Gold 2011) for his outstanding achievements as the NYSC helmsman, whose resilience and doggedness, is believed to be one huge driving force in the huge successes so far recorded by the scheme. And for parents and guardians, they now have their confidence strengthened as they know that the security and welfare of their children and wards is paramount to the scheme.

Sunday 7 August 2011

'NYSC reforms is beyond security’

'NYSC reforms is beyond security’
By Bukola Amusan, Abuja
07/08/2011


The Minister of Youth Development Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi has said the on-going reform of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) scheme is beyond securing corps members.
Speaking yesterday in Abuja at the opening ceremony of a 3 -day retreat for the staff of the ministry with the theme ‘’Youth Development and transformation Agenda’’, Abdullahi said reforming the scheme was necessary following the killing of some corps members in Bauchi state during the last general election.
He explained:”We must agree on how to reform NYSC beyond security of corps members. Security is very important but the kind of reforms must be able to bring huge returns on the investment not only to the participating youth corps members but also to Nigeria as a country,” he stated.
Abdullahi assured that the mandatory one-year service will now be used to turn young people to job creators.
He said the era of going about with Curriculum Vitae after the scheme was over.
He condemned the organisation of youth empowerment schemes by some agencies and ministries without input from the Ministry of Youth Development, which he said should be on the driving seat with such efforts.

Sunday 31 July 2011

The great NYSC crime cover-up

The great NYSC crime cover-up
By Peter Nkanga

July 31, 2011 12:34AM


Almost a year after officers of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) arrested and prosecuted 69 fake National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) members rounded up at an illegal NYSC orientation camp in Keffi, Nassarawa State, the suspected organisers of the camp, believed to be high-ranking NYSC officials, are still walking free and are being shielded from investigation and prosecution by the leadership of the service, NEXT investigation has shown.
Highly-placed sources in the NSCDC and the police said while the ‘fake corpers’ who are more or less victims of the corrupt and mercantile tendencies of some NYSC officials, have been disgraced and convicted, the NYSC director-general, Maharazu Tsiga, a serving Brigadier-General in the Nigerian Army, has made it impossible for operatives of the NSDC and the police to bring the suspected masterminds behind the illegal camp to book.
NEXT learnt that the NYSC boss has used his military links to block investigations into the matter and has spurned requests by the police to interrogate some of his staff implicated in the scandal.
The 69 ‘fake corpers’ including a nursing mother, were apprehended on July 26, 2010 when NSCDC operators swooped on their camp in a remote location in Nassarawa State. They were immediately arraigned before a Keffi Upper Area Court, which, in August 2010, sentenced each of them to three years imprisonment, with an option of a N10,000 fine.
The culprits, who acknowledged that they were not eligible to participate in the one-year compulsory national service, however confessed that they each paid between N70,000 and N150,000 to suspected NYSC agents across the country to procure fake NYSC call-up letters to the fake camp, believed by security agents to have been in existence for many years before last year’s raid.
One NSCDC personnel who partook in the raid, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the criminal syndicate behind the camp even had police officers attached to the place in an apparent bid to make it pass for the real thing.

Blocking investigations
Since the raid, NEXT learnt that the Force Criminal Investigation Department in Abuja and the headquarters of the NSCDC have laboured vigorously to get to the root of the matter and uncover those behind the fake camp. Our investigation indicates that Mr Tsiga has effectively frustrated the investigations by failing to release his staff named in the scam to the investigating officers for questioning.
Before running into the brick wall erected against their work by the NYSC boss and his officials, detectives of the two security agencies were able to identify at least four staff at the NYSC head office in Abuja. Those identified are Idris Y. Abubakar, Mwangwi Kingsley, Ahmed Alhassan, and one Abraham, commonly known as AB, as having a case to answer.
The NSCDC operative, who did not want his name mentioned for fear that he might be punished, said his agency passed the report of its investigation to both the leadership of the NYSC and the anti-fraud unit of the police. He said his team had to give up the chase of the suspected NYSC officials after the leadership of the youth service scheme “became very hostile” to investigators, and wouldn’t allow access to suspects.
But while the NSCDC has surrendered, the police have continued the chase, but are becoming increasingly frustrated as well. An officer privy to the investigation said the inquiry was not making any headway either “because of the recalcitrant attitude of the NYSC DG.” Mr Tsiga has shown clearly on at least two occasions that he was not keen on security agents unravelling those behind the crime. In November 2010, the Police wrote to the NYSC boss requesting him to release the four suspects who are members of his staff for interrogation. In the letter (seen our reporter) he was also requested to supply documents and other details needed to help in their investigation. Mr Tsiga did not respond, despite the letter being received and acknowledged in his office.
After a four-month wait for Mr Tsiga’s response, the police again wrote to the NYSC boss in March 2011, reminding him of their request for his cooperation in interrogating the brains behind the criminal syndicate in his organisation. Mr Tsiga still refused to reply or render assistance, thus undermining the police’s effort to unravel the crime.
“We have since realised that he has no respect for the police,” lamented a top police officer in Abuja. “We do not know whether he has anything to hide in this matter. But it is clear he does not want this investigation. Or maybe he is playing for time, believing that with time, the investigation will be swept under the carpet and forgotten.”

Shielding Mr Tsiga
Numerous attempts to reach Mr Tsiga for his comments were rebuffed by NYSC officials. At one time in late June, he was said to be attending a conference in Kaduna State. Upon his return the following week, the NYSC spokesperson, Mercy Kolajo, was again contacted. She however declined comment, saying “It is only the DG who can speak officially on this issue. I cannot say anything unless he gives clearance.” Instead of making efforts to put our reporter in touch with Mr Tsiga, she merely referred him to Mr Tsiga’s protocol officer, identified as Mr Yusuf, who was to facilitate audience with the army general, but he refused after being briefed of the matter.
“This is a sensitive issue which I don’t think I am in a position to handle. NYSC has a Public Relations Unit, which handles such matters. This kind of issue should not have been brought to me,” Mr Yusuf said. “They are the ones who should facilitate your seeing the DG. They should know better. I’ll have to refer you back there.” With the way our reporter was tossed around by officials for several weeks, it appears the NYSC head office, located in the Maitama district of Abuja, is being run in a military commando style, where no one is willing to present any perceived ‘bad news’ before the General. However, after a recent visit to the place, Hillary Nasamu, an administration official attached to Mr Tsiga, denied that any staff of the NYSC was involved in any criminal act.
“Why would an NYSC officer be involved? Even by the imagination of the most naive person, what would an NYSC person benefit from a fake camp?” Mr Nasamu said.
He also denied knowledge of any letter written to his boss by the police on the matter. “No, No, No, there is none,” Mr Nasamu said. “At least I should know because I work with the DG. Such information would have come in. There is nothing like that. That I know very well.” But our investigation was able to establish that the police letters were indeed delivered and properly acknowledged at Mr Tsiga’s office.
The police also appear reluctant to speak on the record in this matter. When our reporter first contacted him, the Deputy Force Public Relations Officer, Yemi Ajayi, requested that the enquiry be e-mailed directly to him. But on receiving the questions, he said he was not competent to speak on the matter. He directed all enquiries to the Force Public Relations Officer, Sola Amore, who could not be reached as at the time the paper was to go to press.

An organised crime
The police and NSCDC operatives who spoke to us said organising fake NYSC camps had for long been a lucrative side-business for some staff of the scheme.
The suspects operated the parallel orientation camp in Nasarawa State where they provide complete NYSC kits to about 300 fake youth corps members assembled from all over Nigeria. These would also be given letters to fraudulently serve in organisations and subsequently obtain NYSC discharge certificates.
“As an organised crime, the whole exercise is a syndicate thing made up of a cartel all over the country with agents both in the tertiary institutions, NYSC Office and so on,” NSCDC national spokesperson, Emmanuel Okeh, said when the news of the Nasarawa fake camp first broke last year.

Thursday 28 July 2011

Boko Haram - NYSC Spends N4 Million on Corps Members' Relocation

Boko Haram - NYSC Spends N4 Million on Corps Members' Relocation

Abdulkareem Haruna
28 July 2011


Maiduguri — National Youth Service Corp (NYSC) may have spent about N4 million on transportation to get the 2011 Batch 'B' Corp members out of Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, in view of the insecurity caused by the continuing Boko Haram insurgence.
But NYSC authorities in the state said the circumstance that warranted the total redeployment of the Corps members had been exaggerated beyond the real situation on ground.
NYSC Coordinator for Borno State, Nuhu Kwage, who was not specific about the actual cost of transporting the freshly oriented youth corps members out of Maiduguri to their respective states of origin, said "it will cost the NYSC not less than N4 million."
Director General of NYSC, Brigadier General, Maharazu Tsiga, had two weeks ago ordered that in view of the security challenges in the state, he could not allow the corps members to remain in the state that is being fled by even the residents.
Speaking to Journalists during the closing of the Batch 'B' Orientation in Maiduguri, Kwage commended the courage of the corps
Members, who, despite the pressures from their respective homes kept calm till the end of the two weeks orientation exercise.
"About 140 Corps members that participated in the orientation exercise that just concluded have surprisingly lobbied to be left to remain; so we have posted them to areas outside the crisis zone in the state. But interestingly some of them have even lobbied from outside this camp to be posted to Maiduguri where everyone sees as a hot zone. And this may not be unconnected by the fact that the JTF Commander, had come to assure them that their security is guaranteed because the attacks going on in town is targeted at government and not on private individuals."
He added that "this situation is highly exaggerated and that was why it was difficult for us to convince outsiders that things were calm here in the camp; but those of who are here know that it was not the whole of Borno State that is faced with the crisis; the whole of the crisis being reported happened only within Maiduguri and some little part of Jere, which are only two out of the 27 local government areas of the state." As at the closure of camp, about 93 buses from the public transport were rented to convey the Corps members to their respective states where they are expected to spend two weeks break before reporting for their new postings.

NYSC Redeploys 82 Corps Members From Bauchi

NYSC Redeploys 82 Corps Members From Bauchi

28 July 2011

No fewer than 82 of the 620 corps members deployed to Bauchi State for the current service year have been redeployed to other states.
The NYSC coordinator in the state, Mr Abraham Tizhe, who spoke with newsmen at the orientation camp in Ganjuwa Local Government Area of the state, said during the programme, more than 300 corps members applied for redeployment to other states. He said that he and other NYSC officials had to counsel and assure them that the state would be conducive for them. He said after that, 200 of them withdrew their applications for redeployment.
Tizhe assured the corps members that security agencies had taken necessary measures to secure their lives and property, and urged them to avoid any act that could tarnish their image. He advised them to shun partisan politics and respect the tradition and culture of their host communities.
In his message, Governor Isa Yuguda assured the corps members that government had put in place all necessary measures to ensure their security and welfare.

Tuesday 26 July 2011

Ahmed, Yuguda Assure Corps Members of Their Safety

Ahmed, Yuguda Assure Corps Members of Their Safety

Dele Moses, Ilorin And Patience Ogbodo
26 July 2011


Bauchi — Kwara State Governor, Abdulfatah Ahmed, has assured corps members serving in the state security of their lives and properties.
Ahmed gave the assurance on Tuesday at the closing ceremony of the orientation course for the 2011 Batch 'B' corps members in the state at the orientation camp in Yikpata, Edu local government area of the state.
He said that his administration has put in place adequate security arrangement to ensure that the corps members and all other people in the state are safe.
He stated: "We are all aware of the security threats to the corporate existence of this country, therefore, my administration has put adequate apparatus in place to checkmate it, and also to ensure adequate protection of lives and properties in the state extending to our corps members deployed to the state".
"The state government will not renege on its earlier promises of building additional hostels on camp, perimeter fencing, provision of more functional vehicle and ensuring the repairs of the five out of the six bore holes that were shallowly dug to facilitate the operations of the scheme in the state," he assured.
The state coordinator of NYSC, Ngozi Ezekwe, commended the state government for its support to the scheme and reiterated commitment of the NYSC to the development of the state.
However, Bauchi State Governor, Isa Yuguda has charged local government council chairmen to ensure that all corps members posted to their respective areas were adequately protected.
Isa Yuguda gave the charge on Tuesday during the close of the orientation exercise of the corps members held at the NYSC Permanent Orientation camp, Wailo.
The Governor also reiterated the commitment of his administration to the wellbeing and security of the corps members.
He called on them to report to the security agents any suspicious movements around them for prompt action.
Yuguda, who was represented by the State Head of Civil Service, Abdon Dalla Gin, urged the corps members to report to government through their secretariat any council chairman, who refused to cooperate with them, as according to him, "government is committed to ensure that the corps members have a successful service year in the state".
He, however, advised them to ensure that they embarked on developmental projects and programmes that would make their service year memorable and useful for posterity.

Monday 25 July 2011

Youth minister to restructure NYSC

Youth minister to restructure NYSC
JULY 25, 2011

BY CALEB AYANSINA

ABUJA- The Minister of Youth Development, Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, weekend, promised to reform the National Youth Service Corps, NYSC, to make it more effective and efficient.

Abdullahi said, the essence of the reform was also to make the NYSC play major role in the transformation agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration.

The minister, who disclosed this during his visit to the NYSC Orientation Camp, Kubwa, FCT, pledged to take the scheme to the next level and ensure it fulfilled current needs and expectations of the country.

The minister described youths as greatest asset of the country and promised to create a platform that would make them harness their potentials.

The minister also pledged to give prompt attention to the welfare of youths in the country.

He said: “Our greatest resource is not oil, but you, the youths. For us in the Ministry, we will continue to engage and create platform to harness potentials of our youth.

“We will add more innovations to the scheme (NYSC) in a way that will bring returns not only to Nigeria, but also to corps members that are participating in the scheme.”

Tuesday 19 July 2011

Tension, mixed feelings as 622 fresh corps members arrive Bauchi

Tension, mixed feelings as 622 fresh corps members arrive Bauchi
JULY 19, 2011

By Suzan Edeh, Bauchi

IN the wake of the brutal murder of 10 corps members in Bauchi State, many parents, especially in the Southern part of Nigeria, had vowed not to let their children serve in the state if they are posted there by the National Youth Service Corps, NYSC. As far as these parents were concerned, Bauchi was no longer a safe place to live, especially if you are a stranger.


This was a sentiment shared by several other people in the country, including many state government officials in the South. So, it was not surprising when there arose strident calls that the NYSC should not post corps members to Bauchi State.

But the state government had moved to douse the anger and tension generated by that ugly incident by assuring concerned parents that it was committed to protecting the lives of corps members under its care.

As if the NYSC has indeed taken the government’s words for it, 633 young graduates were posted to Bauchi State to participate in the 2011/2012 Batch ‘B’ service year. The NYSC state Coordinator, Mr Ibrahim Tzihe, confirmed that 620 corps members were registered for the exercise.

The corps members recently swore an oath of allegiance at the NYSC Wailo Orientation Camp in Ganjuwa Local Government Area of the state where government once again assured them of adequate security in the state throughout their service.

The State Governor, who was represented by the Deputy Governor, Alhaji Sagir Aminu Saleh, said: “The State Government is using this occasion to acknowledge the sacrifice made by corps members during the recently concluded general elections, to the extent that some of them paid the supreme price.

We want to assure corps members that the perpetrators of the hideous crime shall all be brought to justice”.

The Governor who noted that activities of the NYSC scheme have positively affected the socio-economic development of the country, stressed that the scheme has served as a unifying factor for religious, ethnic and cultural differences.

But in spite of these words of comfort, most of the corp members present wore worried faces.

When Vanguard Metro spoke to some of the visibly troubled corps members, they strongly appealed to the Bauchi State Government to provide adequate security measures to safeguard their lives during the service year.

They expressed mixed feelings about their posting to Bauchi State, with most unable to hide their fear of the tragic fate that befell some of their colleagues during the April post-election violence.

The corps members said that even though it was impossible to change what had happened in the past, they were still sceptical about the ability of government to protect them from attack, particularly in the local government areas, where, it is alleged, most of the violence took place.

Modesta Ugo, a Batch B corps member from Kogi State said she was initially not happy when she was posted to Bauchi State for her service year, but had to accept her posting as the will of God for her life.

She said: “It took me time to come in terms with fact that I was being posted to a state where some of my colleagues lost their lives. Even though we do not pray for evil, I pray I complete my service year without problems”.

The corps member called on all the security agents in the state to provide maximum security for corp members so that they will not fall victim to blood-thirsty miscreants.

Another corps member, Bode Oloruwajun from Ondo State, said he initially intended to apply for a change of posting to another state, but had to change his mind following persuasions from his parents to take his posting to Bauchi in good faith.

“I changed my mind because my parents persuaded me to serve in Bauchi. They told me that it is only God that can guarantee adequate security and I should be prayerful,” he said.

But Josephine Michael said she intends to apply for redeployment back to Abuja, because she did not feel secured serving in the state.

According to her: “I just feel insecure here, so I must work my redeployment to where I feel safe. My parents are in support of this”.

Monday 18 July 2011

NYSC to Introduce Skills Acquisition Programme

NYSC to Introduce Skills Acquisition Programme

Sadeeq Aliyu
18 July 2011

The Director General of National Youths Service Corps (NYSC) Brigadier General Mahrazu Tsiga has said that plans are underway by the scheme to introduce a skills acquisition programme to empower corps members after their service year.

Brigadier Tsiga, who said this in Kano while on inspection tour of orientation camps across the country, said the directorate has already written to government on the matter and that corps members have been asked to carry out feasibility studies on businesses of their choice.

He said any corps member, who is committed to the programme would be given N250, 000 as take up grant, saying the gesture would reduce dependence on government.

Tsiga assured that the new monthly allowance of N19,800 will be effective from this month, and that the 2010 Batch 'B' corps members would be given four months arrears of the new package. He called on states and local governments to ensure prompt payment of corps members allowances, saying it is a right not a privilege. He maintained that the Act establishing the scheme stipulates that governments and stake holders must pay allowances to corps members.

He added that corps members are not supposed to pay for their accommodation, saying where there is no accommodation, the employers should give the corps members money to pay for it.

Sunday 17 July 2011

FG Earmarks N500m As Loans To NYSC

FG Earmarks N500m As Loans To NYSC

Brig.-Gen. Maharazu Tsiga , the NYSC Director–General, says the Federal Government has earmarked N500 million for disbursement as loans to corps members to enable them to establish businesses.
Tsiga made the initiative known in Sokoto on Sunday when he addressed Batch ‘’B” 2011 corps members at the temporary NYSC orientation camp at Government Technical College, Farfaru-Sokoto.
He said that under the programme ,“corps members will be given some money to establish their own small-scale businesses.
“The money had been approved by President Goodluck Jonathan under the NYSC war against poverty programme.”
Tsiga said that potential beneficiaries were expected to present feasibility studies, adding that ”when they are approved, we only require their bank accounts to deposit the approved loans.”
He said that the programme, initiated in 2009, was being properly supervised.
Tsiga said that 20 beneficiaries of the programme had just returned from the U.S. after undergoing free training in that country.
“Each of them was given N5 million for the establishment of their own small-scale businesses ,” he added.
Tsiga said that the payment of the newly approved N19,800 monthly allowance to NYSC members took effect from March.

Why kill those innocent Youth Corps members? – Lady Gloria Chuma-Ibe

Why kill those innocent Youth Corps members? – Lady Gloria Chuma-Ibe
JULY 17, 2011

BY JOSEPHINE IGBINOVIA

She still finds it hard to believe that the lives of innocent Youth Corps members could be terminated simply because of the outcome of a general election. Dr. Lady Gloria Chuma-Ibe, Director for Exhibitions & Museum at the Centre for Black and African Arts and Civilization- CBAAC in Lagos, strongly fears that this sudden loss of value for human life could degenerate into an uncontrollable national crisis if not addressed. Here, Lady Gloria who recently bagged a Cultural Ambassador award from the National Association of Nigerian Theatre Arts Practitioners-NANTAP among six other distinguished Nigerians, decries such wanton killings which are supposed to be absent in an African society.


Her words:

From the early days of my work at CBAAC since 1982, my spirit told me that if we at CBAAC cannot reach out to the man on the street with what we do, then we’re of no relevance to the society. If culture is actually to ensure that our positive values are handed over from generation to generation, what are we doing to ensure this is done since things are going wrong in the society? Like Martin Luther King told us, there are two bodies of knowledge in life; one is science and the other is culture. If culture does not chastise science which is technology, man will gradually go extinct. Culture here is your religion, acts, performances, and all other positive values embedded in the world of culture.

If we do not tailor science to suit the purposes of man, man will someday use nuclear bomb to render the world extinct. So, the essence of culture and our existence at CBAAC, is to control technology at the pace it is going.

If we don’t bring in humanity into technology, people will go extinct because one day, somebody will say “Let me test this bomb and see whether it will work” and before you know it, the entire world will be reduced to dust! God will not let that happen!

Culture is to give a conscience to science, reminding people to do unto others as they would want others do unto them. If those values that make us co-exist as human beings are allowed to die, some day, those in science will end up eliminating everybody! These values include value for human life, for humanity, etc. Science actually has no conscience, and would rather prefer computers and robots to human beings!

The truth is that we seem to have totally lost value for life. This amazes me so much! The line of thinking of our brothers and sisters in the Northern part of Nigeria is such that can really give one migraine! The Arabs in Libya and some other countries kind of operated a monarchical leadership, and have actually been enduring for hundreds of years, the notion of a man leading and handing over to his son.

We in a way agree that their protest today is right because every human being requires freedom since when you’re free, you can contribute to how you’re led. So, we can understand that they are fighting for democracy which is what is being advocated in the whole world today. Nobody wants monarchy anymore!

Even if the monarchs want to exist, let them exist on their own like we have in Britain; they have their monarchs but they are not interfering with leadership. So, that way, people can have their human rights.

In Northern Nigeria, every small incident in Nigeria sparks off the killing of human beings. This issue is still not being addressed because we seem not to have leaders who could call a spade by its name. What offence did those youth corps members killed recently in the north commit? They were put there just to ensure there is transparency. Don’t we have Muslims in the South? They’re not killing anybody for any reason. They are co-existing with Christians without any problem.

Even if the North says Nigeria should split, how is it going to favour them when they do not have what it takes to stay as a nation? The minerals and all the things they need to survive on are in the South. Yes, they’ve managed to produce food to an extent, and that’s good also. Nature has made everybody inter-dependent, and we should learn to respect that so that we can all live together as human beings! Why can’t we stop being tribalistic, and look for leaders who know what to offer?

Look at Fashola in Lagos State! Igbos, Hausas, Yorubas, and in fact everybody voted for him because we can see what he’s doing. Even the blind knows that Fashola is working. Look at all what he was able to offer within a period of four years only! All we should seek is for life to be conducive for us all.

Let there be security, education, basic needs of life, etc. We shouldn’t care who is there in as much as we have a president who is interested in what he has come to do, and not in amassing wealth. Who takes wealth to heaven or to the grave? If you’re alive and you cannot impact anybody’s life positively, what is the wealth to you? You will leave that money behind when you die, but the souls you’ve touched will forever remember you.

Let’s fight for the best person to rule. We need to stop this wasting of lives because of elections results, religion, etc. Why can’t those who lost at elections accept their defeat in good faith?

Our children who are posted to other parts of the country for youth service should be made to feel at home there. The one that made me weep was a group of Youth Corps members who ran into the custody of some policemen. The policemen shot in the air to scare away the rebels who were coming with their knives and machetes, but when they ran out of bullets, these rebels went in and eliminated all the Youth Corps members!

This is a place where we are supposed to have a governor! If the police could shoot in the air to avoid wasting human lives, why couldn’t these rebels act human for once and spare those Youth Corps members? We just can’t continue to massage people’s ego because they come from the North. Something has to be done! I call on President Goodluck Jonathan to show us that courage has a presence. If Nigeria continues this way, we’ll end up going our separate ways. We should stop talking about zoning because as a matter of fact, it irritates the mind and gets educated and intelligent people irritated. You can’t make a nincompoop the president of a nation, all in the name of zoning! Give us somebody who is qualified!

For me, I won’t say they should erase NYSC, but the truth is that we can’t be pretending all’s well with the posting when we know there’s so much hatred in some parts of the country.

My recommendation is that Youth Corps members should be posted to their own geopolitical zone. For example, those from Imo State should be sent to Anambra State, those from Bauchi should be sent to Zamfara.

We can’t keep allowing the elimination of children who are being groomed to take over the future. Until these fanatics are able to accept other religions and people into their midst, let us continue to send their own people to them. It’s however sad that the essence of Youth Corps is being defeated.

Friday 15 July 2011

Why NYSC members’ allowances were hiked

Why NYSC members’ allowances were hiked
By Tayo Owolabi and Damilola Makanjuola, Abuja
15/07/2011

President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday explained why he approved the upward review of corps members allowances from N9,700 to N19,800.
Jonathan spoke through his "Facebook" page.
He said the corps members sowed a sacrificial seed for the greatness of Nigeria during the April elections, adding that government cannot expect the youth to give the country their best without the government reciprocating such a kind gesture.
The President said: "Our youth corps members have sowed a sacrificial seed for the greatness of Nigeria by being there when Nigeria needs them most especially in service to the mostneedy Nigerians and we cannot expect our youth to give us their best without Nigeria giving them her best.
"This is why I approved the upward review of youth corps’ wages from N9,700 to N19,800."

Thursday 14 July 2011

Nigeria: NYSC Must Serve Its Purpose - Minister

Nigeria: NYSC Must Serve Its Purpose - Minister

Maureen Onochie
13 July 2011


The National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) must be positioned to serve the purpose which Nigeria expects it to serve, new Minister of Youth and Development, Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, said yesterday.

Speaking while responding to questions from journalists in his office in Abuja, Abdullahi said the scheme will be looked at and made to serve the purpose of contemporary challenges which Nigeria faces.



"We are going to look at NYSC and we are going to make sure that at the end of the day, it serves the purpose of contemporary challenges that Nigeria face," he said.

He said the recent increment made on the allowance for the corps members shows the importance of the scheme to the country hence "if the institution that takes almost 90% of the ministry's budget is that important, then we need to ask ourselves how do we get value for the investment to bring benefits to the country and to the individuals participating in the scheme and their families and as well, ensure their security."

Abdullahi said he would explore every opportunity that would give jobs to the youths and stop the importation of artisans to the country as part of President Goodluck Jonathan's transformation agenda.

On youth development centres nationwide, he said they would be reviewed, adding that the ones which were started would be completed.

According to him, "there is no way we are going to stay here in Abuja and be able to run the development centres in the states. We must have a network with all the states and civil societies to ensure that we are all working on the same goal and focus."

On his part, the Permanent Secretary, Alh. Umar Farouk pledged the support of all staff to ensure that the new mandate is achieved.

NYSC redeploys corps members as attack heightens in Borno


NYSC redeploys corps members as attack heightens in Borno
By Ifedayo Adebayo
July 14, 2011

The national secretariat of National Youth Service Corps announced on Wednesday that it was planning massive redeployment of corps members serving in Borno State as a result of the current security challenges in the area.

The NYSC director general, Maharazu Tsiga, made the announcement in Maiduguri while briefing reporters on the latest development in the state, stating that "the NYSC will not hesitate to relocate corps members from states where there is no security for them.

"Borno is not an exception. We have decided to relocate all those in the camp and others already serving from the state," Mr Tsiga said.

He said that the relocation would be limited to those willing to leave the state, but "those who wish to stay behind will not be affected by the relocation, because we do not want a repeat of what happened in Bauchi last year, where massive relocation led to protest. Married women, nursing mothers and those who are sick will also be left out if they wish."

However, claiming that no corps member would be relocated to his state of origin in the exercise, Mr Tsiga said the practice was against the NYSC code and "we are going to decide which part of the country to relocate the corps members, because no member will be allowed to serve in his state of origin."

The NYSC boss denounced a media report indicating that there was a bomb blast at the Borno NYSC Camp on Tuesday, saying it was untrue.

"The story indicating that three corps members died after an explosion in the camp is not only untrue, but unfortunate. Media men should strive hard to make peace and not try to create problems," he said.

He also expressed shock over some text messages indicating that the NYSC camp in Jigawa was on fire.

Meanwhile, in another attack, suspected members of the Boko Haram sect on Wednesday detonated a bomb outside the residence of late Borno state former governor, Mala Kachalla. Military spokesperson, Victor Ebhaleme ,said that the blast did not hurt anyone.

Mr Kachalla died in 2007, but his family still resides at his house in Maiduguri.

Prior to the recent attack, Boko Haram struck in the Borno state capital on Tuesday evening, killing three people riding in a van close to a military checkpoint.

Commander of the Joint Military Taskforce, Jack Nwachukwu Nwaogbo, a major general, said an explosive went off under the van as its driver slowed down at a military and police checkpoint in the metropolis. The blast killed the driver and two passengers.

The University of Maiduguri yesterday announced that it was shutting down indefinitely over threat letters it received purportedly from the group.

University spokesperson, Ahmed Mohammed, said that the institution could no longer guarantee the safety of its students and that the university would not be held responsible should anything happen to any student.

In a June 12 handbill attributed to Boko Haram, the group asked for the prosecution of some former governors, which it blamed for the 2009 death of its leader. The source of the leaflet could not be ascertained.

Meanwhile, committee of Borno elders and leaders of thought have called on President Goodluck Jonathan to ensure the withdrawal of all soldiers deployed to the streets of Maiduguri, arguing that the soldiers have failed to address the security situation perpetrated by the Islamic sect; but instead have only succeeded in burning down houses and cars, killing innocent people and harassing passers-by since their deployment to the state.

A Federal High Court sitting in Abuja on Wednesday fixed July 19 for taking the plea of five police officers accused of unlawfully killing the late leader of the Boko Haram sect, Mohammed Yusuf.

Those charged to undergo the trial are J.B. Abang, Akeera, and Madu Buba, all assistant commissioners of police; Mohammed Ahmadu, a chief superintendent of police, and Adamu Gado, a sergeant.

Wednesday 13 July 2011

FG set to improve NYSC scheme

FG set to improve NYSC scheme
07/13/2011


The Federal Government has reiterated its resolve to restructure the National Youth Service Scheme to meet the challenges for which the service was set up and in prevailing economic situation in the country.
President Goodluck Jonathan stated this yesterday at the NYSC camp in Ikot Itie Udung during the official inauguration of the Batch B corps members deployed to Akwa Ibom State for the 2011 service year stressing government intention was aimed at rendering the NYSC scheme more functional, efficient and effective.

Represented by the state Deputy Governor, Mr. Nsima Ekere, he called on the members of the NYSC to take part in all the activities and programmes at the camp while charging local governments and host communities as well as corps’ employers to ensure the safety of the corps members in their domain.
Mr. Ekere, who also inspected some projects completed by the state government in the camp urged the newly sworn-in corps members to regard Akwa Ibom as their home and exhibit high sense of discipline throughout their service year.

Also speaking, the National Chairman of NYSC Board, Chief Linus Okom,
commended the Akwa Ibom State Government for the rehabilitation of
facilities at the NYSC camp.

He expressed delight with the cordial relationship existing between
the NYSC and the State Government which has facilitated the smooth
operation of the scheme in the State.
The Chairman announced the upward review of the allowances of the corps’ members to N19,000 to enhance their productivity.

On her part, the State NYSC Board Chairman and Permanent Secretary of Ministry of Youth and Sports, Mrs. Roseline Ekwere, affirmed that the long years of existence of the NYSC scheme has contributed immensely to the socio-economic development of the State through its community development projects.

The State Coordinator of the NYSC, Mr. Aniefiok Okpongette, while announcing that a total of 2020 corps members were deployed to the State for the Batch B 2011 said 1,210 were male and 810 female and attributed the delay in the inauguration to the Army Day celebration held last Wednesday in the state.

By Charles Effiong, Uyo

Tuesday 12 July 2011

Corps Members to Receive N19,800 Monthly

Corps Members to Receive N19,800 Monthly

Victoria Ojeme
11 July 2011


Abuja — The Federal Government has approved an increment in the monthly allowance of Corps members from N9,775 to N19,800.

The increment was conveyed in a letter from the Presidency to the Office of the Director-General of the National Youth Service Corps, NYSC, and sent to all state Coordinators of the NYSC.

Tsiga who spoke to newsmen, Monday, in Abuja said "I am delighted to inform you that The President and Commander-in- Chief, Goodluck Jonathan has graciously approved increment in the Corps members allowances from N9,775.00 to N19,800.00 with effect from March,2011.

" The payment will take effect from March, 2011รข-' and the 2010 Batch 'B' Corps members that have just passed out from the scheme will therefore be paid in arrears" he said.

"They are serving their fatherland, we are posting them to states outside their state of origin, nobody gives them anything except the allowances and it has been stipulated in the law establishing the NYSC that the Federal, States, Local Government and other stakeholders should periodically review the allowances of the corps members", he said.

He called on states and local governments to emulate the gesture of the Federal Government and improve on the allowances, accommodation and other welfare of the corps members as according to him," the future of the country are in their hands".

Saturday 9 July 2011

It is time to scrap the NYSC programme

It is time to scrap the NYSC programme
By Ikhide R. Ikheloa
July 9, 2011

The Nigerian National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) programme should be scraped. It would be a great way to honour the souls of the brave youth corps members who were brutally murdered in Northern Nigeria during the recently concluded elections. Judging by the NYSC's disgraceful looking website, those young souls have been forgotten. Please go to the awful website (http://www.nysc.gov.ng). There is no mention of that horrid episode in our country's history, not one mention.

The last news posted there was from 2009. The website features broken links and ancient information. It alleges that one Brigadier General Maharazu Ismaila Tsiga is the Director-General and Chief Executive of the scheme, but there is no way of confirming this; no Nigerian government website that I know of provides useful, usable information. If he is the Director-General, shame on him for running a shoddy programme, at least on the Internet.

The website has a search function and an alleged mail function for its staff members; try to use either and they laugh uproariously at you until they end up gasping in broken links. I was unable to download the only document on the site (‘The NYSC Decree'); I got an intriguing message announcing that the file is corrupted and cannot be repaired. Nigeria is not a serious country. Only in Nigeria can a programme that targets today's youth be so analogue.

The NYSC should be scrapped. If it is to continue (as perhaps the only source of income these unfortunate youth will ever get from my generation of thieving leaders) then members should be posted to their states of origin. It might force some of my ajebutter cousins to finally go see Papalolo in our village. Many of them can drive around Dubai blindfolded but cannot spell Ewu our hometown. There is the issue of equity; ever since the scheme was launched, Nigerians of means have always found ways to manipulate the postings to their children's advantage. These days, their offspring do not even smell those dishevelled campuses where children of the poor play at being "undergraduates." They are all abroad studying in real universities. Our leaders should be shot.

I performed my NYSC obligation decades ago in a place called Kagoro in Kaduna State simply because we could not find anyone in our vast extended family that knew someone that could post me to my father's compound. We were shuttled into a boarding school in Malali Village in Kaduna for our "orientation" where hung-over semi-literate soldiers took turns berating us for marching with two left feet. I had a wonderful time, I will not lie. I remember being paid a lot of money and not knowing what to do with the leftovers after the drinking. We got N90 bicycle allowance (actually Gulder beer allowance) and then they paid us N180 a month as graduate corps member. I taught at Kagoro Government Secondary School, Kagoro, a stone's throw from Kafanchan, the famous railway hub. I am sure those ancient trains are still loitering around that place.

I learnt a lot and I fell in love with the Hausa language. We made lots of friends and we were treated extremely well. I encountered discrimination once due to my ethnicity. I had gone to eat pounded yam in Kafanchan with two colleagues from Oduduwaland. When we got there the proprietor took one look at me and declared me to be "awon omo kobokobo" - a pejorative for an Igbo person. My friends, knowing that I understood Yoruba, quite gently tried to help by suggesting to her that I was an Omo Bendel. She shook her head and declared "Okan naa niwon" - "they are all the same!"

It is clear from reading the dated information on the NYSC website that not much has changed in terms of the vision and objectives of the program. In the absence of accountability, the NYSC programme has become an unsupervised afterthought for warehousing the dispossessed who just graduated from being mis-educated in Nigeria's institutions of "higher learning." It is time to stop the charade.

Nigeria's leaders do not listen to anything that does not have loot and money attached to it. Their nonchalance won't stop me from complaining. At the minimum, I would like to see the NYSC website taken down immediately and a competition started for the best designed website. The first thing they need to do is to put up a memorial of names and faces of all the brave corpers that fell in the line of duty this year. So we may never forget.

And they should take down the pathetic photograph of Brigadier General Tsiga the Director-General and replace it with something more pleasing to the eye. From my Kagoro experience, there is a core group of youth corps members out there that can put together a brilliant, sexy, content-rich website. We should dedicate them to revamping the website as "their community development." They are always on Facebook anyway. The Internet is their community, these digital natives. Ajuwaya!

Friday 8 July 2011

Insecurity: NYSC changes redeployment rules again

Insecurity: NYSC changes redeployment rules again
Posted by Obanor Chukwuwezam
July 7, 20011

The National Youth Service Corps has re-introduced guidelines for reposting of prospective corps members desirous of changing their postings.
This was obviously in response to the deluge of requests for redeployment by corps members posted to some northern states. The guidelines, which were earlier suspended in response to the post-election violence that led to the death of 14 corps members in Bauchi State, were re-introduced to curb abuse.
A memo from the office of the Director-General of the NYSC, Brig.-Gen. Maharazu Tsiga, which was sighted by our correspondent in Abuja, on Wednesday reads in part, “In the light of the security uncertainty in Bauchi State, management saw with corps members and waved all due process to expedite action on relocation.”
He, however, expressed dismay that this course of action appeared to have encouraged corps members from all states of the federation, including the FCT, to besiege the national headquarters seeking relocation for the flimsiest reasons.
This, he said, had had an adverse effect on the conduct of official business. The memo states, “In view of the above, corps members are to note and adhere strictly to the following:
“Applications for relocation are to be channeled through the state and FCT coordinators. The corps members who already find themselves in the premises of the National Directorate Headquarters may submit their applications at the Director-General’s office and return to their states and wait for the reply.


“All approvals for relocation will be forwarded to the affected corps members through their state coordinators.
“Therefore, corps members who have submitted their applications for relocation at the DG’s office are to go back to their respective states of service and not wait or hang around in the expectation of personally collecting approval.”
A separate memo pasted on walls within the NYSC headquarters also reads: “All prospective Corps members must proceed to their respective camps immediately. “Relocation matters will be handled through the established procedure from their states of deployment.”
Our correspondent also gathered that the management of the scheme took into account the Bauchi experience in posting corps members to the state.
While some states like Lagos and Kano are having close to, if not more than 2,000 corps members, Bauchi was given about 615. Most of those posted to the state requested to be posted on account of marriage or on health grounds.
The authorities of the Adekunle Ajasin University, Akunba Akoko, Ondo State had asked the NYSC not to post any of its graduates to northern Nigeria, citing security concerns.
SOURCE: PUNCH

Kill NYSC, snuff life out of Nigeria

Kill NYSC, snuff life out of Nigeria
Maikudi Abubakar Zukogi, mandzukogisawaba@yahoo.com, 0802-726-7563

Everyone who has truly served the mandatory one year NYSC scheme will be generous enough to admit its efficacy as a tool for national integration. Coming, as it were, on the heels of the three years bloody civil war, which almost tore the country apart, the scheme was conceived to provide young Nigerians with the opportunity to explore the beauty and diversity of the different cultures which make up the country. This was part of the larger scheme of the process of national healing, reconciliation, rehabilitation and reconstruction.
After almost thirty eight years, the scheme may not have achieved all of its objectives, but it will be immodest of us to dismiss the NYSC as a total failure. Like every other institution in the country, the scheme has had its high and low points, and also not immune to inconsistencies and policy somersaults characteristic of our governments over the years. But if truth be told, NYSC has been able to weather the storm in spite of the increasing population of potential corps members and perennially incapacitating logistic challenges. Just a fortnight ago, Brigadier Maharazu Tsiga, the Director General of NYSC, reported at the Pre-mobilization retreat in Kaduna that the scheme is going to admit into the now ongoing 2011 Batch B camp the largest number of corps members in the thirty eight years history of its existence. The implication of this revelation is that NYSC will be stretched beyond imagination to be able to accommodate these desperate graduates.
You will then wonder what the Federal government will do with over a hundred thousand desperate youths at a time if it succumbs to the mounting pressure of ill-advised calls for the cancellation of the scheme. We seemed to down play the relevance of critical institutions in our country and this is contributing to our down ward slide in the desired progress and development. No nation in the world progresses without strengthening its relevant critical institutions. A country that lacks clearly spelt out employment policy for its explosive unemployed population is thinking of not strengthening but sacking the only institution in the country that provides a passage between graduation and sojourn into the volatile and uncertain labour market. Events of the recent past such as communal strives, riots, bomb explosions and the post election crises which claimed the lives of so many innocent serving corps members sure poses soul searching questions about whether such sacrifices are worth taking for a country that treats the life and security of its citizens with levity. For the parents and loved ones of those who got caught up in these unfortunate incidences, this is a legitimate and inviolable demand. For hundreds who died natural deaths at their places of assignment and those who succumbed to the fury and gluttony of our insatiable roads, who speaks for them or what will be the demand of their parents? For each of this group, no sacrifice shall be too great to make to this nation that we all love to call our own for the asking. In spite of the pain, the frustration and the pervading uncertainty, let’s say YES today to Nigeria, and our collective yeses will go a long way in getting the country back to the path of regeneration and renewal.
Yours sincerely, as were several million Nigerians, served in the one year mandatory NYSC scheme. What a wonderful and memorable experience that was! Perhaps the only time you can claim to hold a licence as a Nigerian is when you have gone and served in the NYSC scheme. And I can say with all sense of modesty as other Nigerians like me that NYSC made me a Nigerian. The one year call to service took me to Rivers State, the garden city, one of cities, sorry the geese that lays the golden egg for Nigeria. How can I ever miss the opportunity, even as a twenty two year old, to travel to see for myself this goose that lays the golden eggs? What on earth will stop one from going to see a city that is laced with gardens, or even to have a glimpse of the man who wrote A Forest of flowers? And about this time in Rivers State, it was not Mujahid Asari Dokubo, Ateke Tom or Tom Polo that gets heard, it was MOSOP and the late venerable writer and environmental activist, Ken Saro-Wiwa. While in Rivers State, the lead song in the camp, water carry them go, caught up with me and took me to my first posting, Ogoloma, a town which then can only be accessed through the water as a result of the ongoing Okrika/Andoni riots. Somehow, I got a new posting to the Port Harcourt office of the Sentinel Magazine located along the Ikwerre Road. As soon as I submitted my posting letter to Ralph Egbu who later became Commissioner of Information and Secretary to the State government of Abia under Uzor Kalu, he just threw a pen and a jotter at me and posted me straight to the Civic Centre where the state government was organising a Peace Carnival; and then to RUST, to NAFCON, Onne and to several other places afterwards, until The Sentinel closed shop unceremoniously. And then off I go again to Edeoha, the fondest of all my NYSC memories. Ula-Opata Community Secondary School was located here. Here in this school, I taught all the grammar, the vocabularies, the essays and compositions that I have ever learnt in school. I also taught Achebe, Elechi Amadi who was their own, being an Ikwerre, and Night Rain; and while there, I was truly like some fish doped out of the deep- many thanks to John Pepper Clark. The only English teacher here was a certain Mr. Uzoma who studied NCE in Geography/ Social Studies. It was a great relief indeed for the school that I arrived. The Principal, Mr CC Olimini, gave me some good advice which I used to live peacefully in Edeoha town; a town which is one of many that constitute the Ekpeye Kingdom. How can I forget Mr. Uzoma Okoro, who accommodated me; Mr. Wilson Wadago who dreamt of coming to live in the North; the Chief Priest, Chief Thankgod Atago, who taught me the culture and tradition of the Ekpeyes; and my amiable student and companion, Okwudiri Nebu, who must have taken a degree or two, and married with lovely children.
I couldn’t have had the opportunity to gain this once in a life time experience about this equally great people and great Nigerians if it were not for NYSC. How then could I be a party to the ill-informed call for the scrapping of NYSC? I stand tall among the rational majority who are saying YES to the reinvigorated and re-engineered NYSC for the greater good of Nigeria.

Should the NYSC Stay Or Be Scrapped?

Should the NYSC Stay Or Be Scrapped?

Faith Olaniran
7 July 2011

opinion
Fut Minna — Since the killing of some corps members during the ethno-religious crisis in Jos in 2009, there have been calls from several quarters for a review of the NYSC. The post election violence, once again brought the issue to the fore, provoking questions about its relevance.

The attack and eventual killing of some corps members who were recruited by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) as ad-hoc staff by irate youths protesting the result of the presidential election, the kidnap of five corps members in Rivers State and the alleged rape of a corps member in Osun State, have led to fresh calls for abolition of the scheme which seeks to promote national unity.

While some fancy the idea of reviewing the scheme, a few others are calling for its outright abolition. Students of the Federal University of Technology, Minna Niger State, who were just mobilized into the scheme and have been posted to different parts of the country expressed their views.

Rebecca Ajani, a graduate of Agric Economics posted to Nasarawa feels that the scheme should not be scrapped but Borno State should be excluded from the scheme as was done to Bauchi State. She noted that most youths posted to the Northern states are confused.

Mary Olorunleke read Animal Production and was posted to Plateau State. She said Nigerians should co-operate to keep the vision of the scheme alive. She called on governments of the various states where corps members are posted to provide accommodation and job opportunities for them.

Dolapo Owoeye, a graduate of Biochemistry posted to Ondo State wants the scheme to still be in place but with better security. Owoeye cited the bomb blast at the police headquarters in Abuja asking: "Who will guard the guards at this time?"

Tosan Igbogbo who was posted to Lagos State said the scheme should not be scrapped as she has always looked forward to it. Igbogbo said scrapping the NYSC would be like abolishing a complete educational system. She called on the Federal Government to increase the allowance and tackle security breaches.

Edith Ukpebor, who was posted to Nasarawa said the scheme has not achieved its purpose as youths still go back to the streets seeking jobs because they are not absorbed in their places of primary assignment. Ukpebor said the money used to finance the scheme should be invested in job creation and sustenance of the economy.

Seun Ojelade who read Quantity Surveying and is posted to Delta State said the main concept of the scheme was good but should be scrapped in the interest of national peace.

Godwin Ilalokhoin, a graduate of Electrical Engineering posted to Kwara State said the scheme should be reformed with the introduction of an insurance scheme covering all serving crops members.

Tsiga Takes Over Redeployment of Corps Members

Tsiga Takes Over Redeployment of Corps Members
6 July 2011

The Director General of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), Brig- Gen. Maharazu Tsiga has personally taken over the redeployment of corps members who rejected their posting to volatile states.

Tsiga, who called the corps members to the conference room at Gowon House in Abuja on Monday, said that anybody who came for redeployment would be attended to.

The batch 'B' NYSC members, who were to resume orientation camp nationwide on Tuesday had besieged the headquarters of the scheme for possible redeployment to other states.

Most of the NYSC members who were seeking for redeployment were either posted to Borno, Jigawa, Bauchi, Imo and Kaduna, among others.

Tsiga, however, asked the corps members to submit their posting letters along with their state of preference for redeployment.

"Those of you who gave me your call up earlier will have to come back at 3 pm and 4 pm today (Monday) respectively while those who had submitted earlier will have to wait for their new posting," he said.

Members of the University of Lagos Parents Forum had called on President Goodluck Jonathan and the National Assembly to prevail on the NYSC not to post their children to areas they described as death zones.

Tinuke Jaiyeola, a corps member, who was posted to Borno State, claimed that she came for redeployment to other state because of the fear of 'Boko Haram'.

Charles Opurul, also a corper, said that he was posted to Taraba but came for redeployment, pointing out that he was too young to die because of the volatile nature of the place.

Joy Lawrence from Edo, who was posted to Imo, equally came to seek redeployment to either Abuja or Nasarawa, saying that the security report she got from Imo was scaring.

95,000 NYSC members were mobilised for the 2011/2012 batch 'B' with the orientation taking place on Tuesday across the nation.