Tag: NYSC

  • Restructuring NYSC

    Following recent various scandals trailing public officers with respect to the compulsory one-year National Youth Corps Service ( NYSC ), there have been divergent views on whether the Scheme is indeed still necessary.

    While some have argued that NYSC is better scrapped, others hold the view that the Scheme could rather be put into much more beneficial use, and made to serve as a means of youth empowerment and development to the nation, and it’s failing economy. It is widely agreed, nevertheless, that the Scheme needs restructuring.

    Based on this divergent views, Students With Pen, a civil society organization, has sought the views of both serving corps members and prospective corpers on how NYSC could best be restructured, via a campaign titled #RstructuringNYSC— in partnership with The Nation Newspaper.

     

  • Corps member arraigned for killing boy

    A 29-year-old corps member serving his national youth service in Osun State, Odedele Feranmi, is in court for allegedly killing a 16-year-old boy, Pelumi Olasunkanmi.

    The accused person was alleged to have driven a Honda car with marked Lagos MUN 187 CU on January 4, 2019 around 11.30am and causing the death of the victim, on the road adjacent the Osun State House of Assembly.

    The corps member was also said to be coming on a top speed from Ibadan to resume to his primary place of assignment before running into bumps along Gbongan road, Osogbo and killing the deceased.

    The Police prosecutor, Mr. Oladoye Joshua, said the accused person killed the deceased with his Honda car, adding that by committing the alleged offense he contravened the provision of section 81(1) Cap 115, Vol 6, Laws of Osun State, 2003.

    The Defence Counsel, Mr. Bola Abimbola-Ige, urged the court to grant his client bail in a liberal term, promising that he would not jump bail.

    He said the accused is still presumed to be innocent in accordance with Section 36(5) of the 1999 constitution of Nigeria, and the provision of Section 118(2) of the criminal procedure law of Osun State.

    He urged the court to exercise its discretional power in favour of the accused person by releasing him on bail pending his trial.

    The accused told the court, upon Magistrate inquiry, that he was expected to resume to his primary place of assignment on Monday January 7, in Osogbo.

    He said he was coming from Ibadan where he lives, before the incident happened.

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    The presiding judge, Magistrate Olusegun Ayilara, who was reluctant in granting the accused bail, said he has never had a terrible experience of such in his life.

    He said: “The accused person is reluctantly granted bail in the sum of N500,000 with two sureties in like sum.

    Magistrate Ayilara said the sureties must be resident within the state and the car of the accused be moved to the court so that he can stand his trial.

    He said the father of the accused should drop three passport photographs and sign undertaken before the court.

    The Magistrate thereby adjourned the matter for mention till January 30.

  • Police investigate killing of corps member in Nasarawa state

    The Police Command in Nasarawa state says it has commenced investigation into alleged killing of a National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) member by some youths in Akwanga Local Government Area (LGA) of the state.

    ASP Samaila Usman, the state Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO) gave the indication in an interview with News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lafia on Monday.

    NAN gathered that Mr Samuel Makene, a 2018 Batch A corps member whose place of primary assignment was Government Secondary School Ubbe, in Akun Development Area, was reportedly stabbed to death on Dec. 20 by some youths at the Akwanga residence of Mr David Ombugadu, the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the state.

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    Usman described the incident as unfortunate, saying that all efforts have been put in place to arrest the killers and bring them to justice.

    “We received a report on the incident and we have commenced full investigation to arrest the killers.

    “I want to assure you that we will do everything possible to bring those involved to face justice for what they did.

    “I also want to assure you that we will be briefing you and the public on any new development concerning the case. I call on those close to the deceased not to take any action but allow us do our job,” he said.

  • Gifted Hands

    All we ever need to survive in this world is just one good head and two hands. It is all we can ever need to succeed and break new grounds.

    It is God’s gift to man. People on the other hand, never get tired of requiring services; hence the need to possess relevant skills that will warrant one’s ability to survive in current day Nigeria where accumulation of degrees are never enough to guarantee a bright future.

    In reality, true entrepreneurship is not inert; it is learnt and acquired overtime. This is the singular reason why everyone is not made for white collar jobs alone.

    Some people have determined in their hearts never to work for anyone, rather, they resort to crafting a means of livelihood by the work of their hands.

    Life took a new turn April this year when Ibukunoluwa Lana, Success Enyubala and Akunna Nwuke were posted to Plateau State in a dramatic new turn. Dogged, persistent, bold and fierce regardless, the trio accepted to journey down to the state. Their mission which has now translated into a future they chose is the clarion call they accepted in good faith. One that included a mix-match of three ladies from different ethnic groups, backgrounds and cultures coming together for a long period of 12 months.

    Eight months down the line of their service year, their stories have indeed changed. So much that they have forged a community of empowered women with the view of taking up the world with not just a certificate, but a business skill that is adjudged lucrative. Service year is not over yet, but by the time it comes to an end, they will be going back with a skill that will feed them for life, whether they choose to hunt for jobs or not.

    The Nation Newspaper caught up with them, and delved into the genesis of this glorious history. One that has driven young and passionate Nigerians into new worlds of Business, Small and Medium Scale Entrepreneurship as they arm themselves with tools that will be useful for the future to come. Joseph Olaoluwa writes

    Getting Nwuke Akunna to sit still is a herculean task. She is the eccentric hardworking type, busy closing deals with someone who is willing to sell her materials to make more bags, rugs and interior decorative materials or she is subtly plying her trade to an admirer of her works to make more deals. As a professional, her work reel speaks for itself, so she is very quick to point out some of her works being used by members of the RCCG Royal Priesthood Assembly Parish. This hot sunny afternoon, she just settled to speak with our correspondent after settling her new found fashion designer. She is looking forward to the dress and is willing to patronize her new found business woman. She is seated now and wiling to converse with me. I motion to her to come with me to one of the numerous boulevards that litter Crest Hotel, Jos South, Plateau State. We choose a shade which is a combination of well-arranged rocks and a tree shading us from the scorching sun. Success Enyubala is seated beside her, but my pestering is too much, so they both oblige me as her fashion designer watches us from a distance, eager to close the deal. Immediately, I started throwing questions. I start with the introductions, choosing to deal with Success first.

    Success Enyubala says she is into interior decoration, making emphasis on household materials. Akunna Nwuke proudly interjects: “I am into interior decoration, hair fascinator and knitting.” Very assertive with what she does, Akunna says that she believes she could be a master of everything time will avail her to learn.

    For the trio, the mastery of bag making, interior décor, and shoe covering was an opportunity that presented itself which they took without hesitation, having being introduced to the business beforehand at a certain time of their lives. So, when Akunna picked up interest, the goldmine the opportunity presented was too juicy to neither discard nor ignore.

    For Akunna, the whole thing began eight months ago at the Mangu Orientation Camp, Plateau State during the Skills Acquisition and Entrepreneurship Development (SAED) programme. Corps members are usually advised to take a pick from the wide range of skills offered during their 21 days in camp and are mentored appropriately on the mastery of these skills all year long.

    “It all began at Mangu Camp when I attended one of the SAED classes, the interior design and decoration class. I saw the throw pillows that there being made in the camp and I picked interest in it. I told myself I was going to pursue it.”

    For Enyubala, it was more of fascination for the things her friends could do. Hence the motivation for her to try it out and convince herself that there is immense joy in creating things with one’s bare hands.

    “Actually I was just fascinated by what I saw my friends doing. I thought about it, asides from the idea of getting to know, meet new people and know new places. I should gain new knowledge asides from the things I have always known before coming down to this state. I thought that since I have seen those things they are doing with their hands and it is not something that has started where I came from, maybe I could gain a skill in it and go onto develop it.

    “My friends introduced it to me- Akunna. We were staying at the same lodge and every time she came home, she came with something new. Sometimes, it could be a new bag and all of that and some other girl, Cynthia joined her and came home with her own things. I thought to myself, this is really awesome. If they could do that thing they were doing, I could do it also.” With the level of comfort and gesticulation oozing from Success, one could tell she was proud of her work, so when she was asked why she decided to keep her degree aside and face a business in the world of bags, and fanciful carpets, Success laid a bold claim.

    “I think this is a plus actually. It is going to give me something more prestigious asides the whole certificate thing.”

    How it all began

    Continuing her story, Akunna met her SAED trainer the very first day the course was introduced.

    “I met her during one of the SAED classes, the very first day the class was introduced to us. When they were calling classes to attend, I heard interior design and decoration and I picked interest in it. So, I walked up to her stand.” One thing that stood out in Akunna’s first meeting with her SAED trainer was the arm of friendship initially offered to a newcomer.

    “She was really friendly. I saw the throw pillows that were made in camp. The aprons were also made in camp. I told her I wanted to continue with the post camp training and she said it wasn’t a bad idea.”

    Ibukunoluwa story isn’t any different. Her journey into the business began way back in her undergraduate days in Ladoke Akintola University of Technology (LAUTECH), Ogbomosho. IBK, as she is fondly called admitted that it would have been an opportunity that would have wasted away as she was in the same hostel with a lady who used to make bags as well. She only realised how lucky she was when a friend outside of her hostel became an apprentice to the lady that made bags in her own hostel. That was the turning point for her.

    IBK who exclaimed loudly while talking to The Nation said: “It was like I was taking an opportunity for granted. How can someone I don’t know from another hostel take interest in a business opportunity that was transacted in my own home?” Ibukun made a promise to join the training herewith and before her undergraduate days were over, she had picked a few techniques. Between then and now, those techniques have obviously improved.

    On arriving Jos, Ibukunoluwa had completely put the business of bag making and shoe making behind her. That episode was closed and suspended until the day of the great reckoning, 4th August 2018. The date was so significant that it wouldn’t skip her memory. As an occupant of the Redeemed Family House situated in Abattoir, Plateau State, buying ingredients in the Abattoir market was a given. Unbeknownst to her, she had passed by her bag trainer severally before she realised that the skill she once gained was being lost daily to other worries and struggles.

    “It was on the 4th of August 2018 I began my training. I usually passed by her shop without noticing the work she was into. I agreed to start working with her that day and took on a three month intensive training that gulped #30,000.”

    Since the money wasn’t available to just give out like that, she chose to pay in instalments by remitting a sum of #10,000 every month.

    According to Akunna, the training is throughout service year and it will expire March 2019 at the cost of N30,000.

    Professionals or not?

    Akunna is of the school of thought that perfection is a moving target. Despite introducing Success to the business and picking up interest right from camp, plus the dexterity she has used in gathering customers and delivering outstanding jobs, she refused to accept that she had become a Pro in the business. She also went further to describe her foray into the business as a training period, not another apprenticeship episode.

    “It is a training period; there is no housemanship or apprenticeship. We are still undergoing training. Every day we have new things to do that are in the course outline. I won’t say I am a professional now because I am still undergoing classes with her (referring to her SAED trainer).” For Akunna, achievement of professional status is at the end of service year in March 2019. This fact she continually stressed modestly.

    Success called herself a professional in the stages she has passed. “Professionalism has to do with certification. Since I haven’t gotten certification which will come at the end of the training and training is at the end of service year, then you can be taken as a professional in the aspects passed. We have course outlines, so at a particular period of time, we have tasks in the course outlines to carry out. For each one you have successfully done, you are regarded as a professional in those aspects. For those ones I passed, I consider myself a professional because if someone tells me to do it just now or much later, I can make it.”

    “I love doing things with my hands”

    Going to school to bag a degree and learning a trade right after is sometime frowned on in Nigeria where a white collar job is usually fancied by friends and family, due to unemployment currently on the rise. Akunna, Success and IBK have refused to see things that way as they are truly proud of how the SAED program of the NYSC has truly liberated them.

    Even with her Mass Communication degree and wealth of experience in journalism, Akunna seems to have her path already laid for her beyond the system.

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    “It depends on individual perspective,” Akunna stated. “For me, I have always been an entrepreneur because I love doing things with my hands. Back then in school, I would bake and sell to my course mates on their birthdays. I have always been an entrepreneur. I have always had interest in it with or without a Bsc or a Master’s degree. I have always had interest in doing something with my hands and impacting the knowledge to people.”

    Hence, learning the trade for Akunna has been truly impactful. “It has been really rewarding. Along the line here in Plateau state, I have met a few people who have asked me to do one or two things with this my skill and I have been able to execute it without difficulty. It has been really rewarding. You know, we don’t depend on the N19,800 alone,” Akunna gesticulated, shrugging her arms. “

    With this skill, when you show someone a sample of the thing you made, the person will be like: Okay, can you make something like this for me and how much will it cost you

    “And that is an added advantage to you and your pocket,” Akunna proudly stated.

    Seeds for the future​

    Success feels it was beyond the now. “Yes it has been rewarding. At least for the time being. But I feel it is not really about now. It holds more meaning after now which is going to resonate in the future.”

    Success said the business doesn’t just stop at giving the service to people that demand it but what it truly involves is empowering others and passing the knowledge.

    “Nigeria is a country now that in order for you to strive to actually become something as a youth; you don’t have to rely on your degree alone because a lot of people have degrees. So what exactly do you want to use to stand out aside from those many degrees that exist in the country?” She asked.

    “Everyone is clamouring for people to start becoming employers of labour not people that seek to be employed as labour. So, with that idea at hand and with this knowledge I am gaining, I believe I can be that employer of knowledge and the same people who I am going to impact the knowledge to, will become employers of knowledge. So the country will not just stop at birthing thousands of graduates that don’t have anything to show for being graduates or literates. It goes a long way to creating employment and putting money in my pocket.”

    Ibukunoluwa’s motivation for learning was in line with Success’s idea, only that Ibukun reiterated the fact that she would love to learn for recreational purposes alone.

    She set to learn the job to be able to help out in the home. “Like just design some bags for the kids, run some contracts for weddings and support the family on a small scale. Most of the bag packs being made are majorly try outs for recreational purposes.” When asked why she didn’t look forward to scaling it in full entrepreneurial mood, she replied modestly that she needed to do something about actively learning the handiwork as well as preparing for life after service.

    Non- profit disclosure

    One thing the ladies declined to speak on was how much they have made in the business so far. Even the business-like Akunna chose to laugh it off, Success and IBK chose not even to banter much on the aspect.

    “How much have I made from this business?” Success exclaimed. “I can’t tell you that,” she maintained. “I don’t really know.” Even though The Nation suggested a million naira worth of jobs and contracts. Success replied hilariously: “by the grace of God. “Yes, by faith.”

    Akunna was a solid rock all through. She didn’t even say word, maybe some few words would have betrayed the girls code. IBK herself would not say.

    When asked about her challenges, Ibukunoluwa said she had never met any brick wall all through her three months of training in the business. She had never been owed nor run into any financial or personal altercations. Conflict in business is a common experience, but IBK seems to be enjoying it all.

    SAED, NYSC is not a waste of time

    As her final words, Akunna reiterated Success’s point. “This country does not need those who have certificates alone; it needs people who can create jobs for people. My final word for fellow corpers like me is don’t sit idly waiting for the next manna to come but to make good use of this opportunity.”

    She continued: “When I first started, I told myself that this SAED skill is grab your copy now! And I really grabbed my copy. To all corpers out there who think SAED and NYSC is just a waste of time; truly SAED or NYSC is not a waste of time. There are things out there NYSC is really doing for us. Avail yourself of these opportunities.” Akunna also believed she would never work for anyone.

    For Success, the world has become a global village. “People have so much fallen into the insight that asides your degree, or certification that indicates you went to school, you need to have something on the job. It doesn’t have to be in your current field of study, or thing of interest. You need to have something extra to back you up.”

    “If that job you are looking at is taken away from you, what becomes of you? Nothing. What if you don’t even get the job? What are you going to be holding onto? Nothing. “

    It goes a long way for youths, especially youths to get something doing with their hands,” Success said “People can never ever get tired of requiring services. Needs arise every single day. As long as human beings live and you have something to offer in the place of a service. There must be a need that arises for them to give that service. Having that in mind, youths should identify themselves with one particular skill to keep them going,” Success concluded.

    Ibukunoluwa Lana, Success Enyubala and Akunna Nwuke have succeeded in doing one vital thing for themselves. They have succeeded in empowering themselves and everyone around them. They have ensured a better future for themselves whether they get that dream job or not. This future, championed by young and vibrant women reiterates that fact that all you need to survive in this word is one good head and two gifted hands.

  • NYSC warns corps members against political thuggery

    The National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) has warned corps members to shun political thuggery and other related crimes.

    Malam Abubakar Mohammed, NYSC Coordinator in Adamawa gave the warning in Yola on Friday shortly after the passing out ceremony of 2018 Batch ‘B’ Stream II corps members who served in the state.

    Mohammed advised the corps members to avoid making themselves available for evil-minded politicians, who usually recruited young people as thugs to unleash terror against their opponents.

    He noted that as 2019 general elections was approaching; corps members should be very careful and resolute in all their daily activities.

    “It is likely some unscrupulous politicians may recruit young people like you into their armies of thugs for their selfish interest.

    “I advise you to distance yourselves from such elements for your own safety and the general good of our country. I also call on you to educate other youths to flee from these types of unpatriotic Nigerians,’’ Mohammed said.

    The coordinator equally encouraged the passing-out corps members to utilise the skills acquired during the service year and become gainfully employed.

    He further urged them to be ambassadors of positive change anywhere they go, by deploying the experiences they got from their sojourn in the state, in order to add value to society.

    The coordinator wished the corps members success in their future endeavours and prayed that God would protect and preserve them.

  • brahim,Buhari’s vision for Nigerian Youths

    The appointment of Brig Gen. Shuaibu Ibrahim, a renowned military scholar and administrator of repute as the Director-General of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) penultimate week by President Muhammadu Buhari has come with a lot of expectations and hope for revitalized national service scheme. Certainly, it is clear to all Nigerians that the NYSC is yet to fully explore its mandate and or, its impact felt appreciably on Nigeria’s national life in tandem with the spirit and mandate of its establishment.

    Youths are the fulcrum of a sound society and where development eludes youths, it poses present and future danger. And those who have meticulously decoded the focus of the administration of President Buhari would concede that the years of massive youth disempowerment in the country, unemployment and underemployment have been his main mania from the outset.

    A neglected and abandoned youth has remained a serious national malaise. And the problem is compounded by the growing strength of employable youths, but collapsed companies and the glaring impossibility that government alone cannot absorb this huge number into its workforce.

    It is the conviction of Mr. President to see a Nigerian youth population that is self-dependent and self-reliant as well as active contributors to national productivity and growth. And the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) offers a veritable platform for the attainment of these national aspirations and goals.

    President Buhari knows that a huge and frightening idle youth population is a recipe for the widespread and assaulting criminalities in Nigeria. It ranges from insurgencies, insurrections, armed robbery, kidnapping, banditry, militancy, communal skirmishes, entrenched and pervasive cultism, prostitution and a myriad of other social vices. Idle and redundant youths provide a rich reservoir of foot soldiers for the lords of these anti-human and anti-social acts and misconducts.

    Buhari’s launch of the Social Investments Programme (SIP) schemes and his administration’s unyielding focus in the promotion of agricultural enterprises and the resuscitation of some collapsed industries are policies and actions packaged to reduce the massive youth unemployment.

    In the NYSC scheme, Mr. President sees another flank of his vision of securing the future of young Nigerians through gainful ventures to take them off the streets or insulated from crisis entrepreneurs who recruit them as merchants of violence, deaths and arson for peanuts. Therefore the introduction of the mandatory Skills Acquisition Entrepreneurship Development (SAED) in NYSC for serving corps members across the country was propelled by the same motivation.

    Though, these initiatives and programmes are beginning to impact positively on youth engagements in the country, but the results are far from President Buhari’s expectations. And added to the existing problems, ethnic, religious, and regional sentiments or animosities seemed to have deepened in contemporary Nigeria, than wane. The prevalence of divisive tendencies, hate sermons and religious segregation have been amplified in Nigeria, much against the spirit of the nation’s founding fathers and primarily, against the word and letter of the concept of the NYSC.

    Nigerians can reminisce that when the military government of Gen. Yakubu Gowon (rtd) established the NYSC with Decree No.24 of May 1973, three years after the end Nigeria’s bitter civil war, it was conceptualized to promote national unity, communality and speedy up, the assimilation of the 3Rs (Reconciliation, Reconstruction and Rehabilitation) in national psyche. Nearly four decades after and with Nigerians more enlightened, these afflictions have taken a stronger stranglehold on Nigeria, especially among the younger generation of Nigerians.

    It is clear public institutions like the NYSC are grossly under-utilized in erecting a pool of millions of graduates who would be meaningfully supported to become self-dependent, creators and employers of labour after the mandatory one-year service. Also, Gen. Ibrahim has a presidential mandate to restructure and reposition the NYSC to churn out young Nigerians who would be true ambassadors, champions and crusaders of national unity, and ethno-religious tolerance, as against the present trend of acting as purveyors of these retrogressive proclivities.

    Therefore, President Buhari’s appointment of Brig Gen Ibrahim to pilot the affairs of the NYSC was not a surprise or accidental. It came after a thorough in-house search and the impeccable credentials of Gen. Ibrahim and previous stint with the scheme placed him topmost among competing contenders and his eventual emergence.

    The NYSC’s new Director-General has an uphill task. The Buhari Presidency expects him to immediately embark on a total overhaul of the system to place it on a pedestal that would truly fulfil its mandate focus and manifest in the attitudinal change of graduates in productivity and perception of the concept of national unity and tolerance. The anticipated reforms and innovations are expected to deepen inter-tribal and inter-religious mix among young Nigerians.

    Gen. Ibrahim must discourage the trend of parents who lobby for their children to be posted back to their states of origin or specific establishments. It demeans the essence of the scheme and deprives these generation of Nigerians the rare opportunity to taste and feel the impact of the country’s diversities.

    Furthermore, the new NYSC Director-General would have to explore ways to make the Skills Acquisition Entrepreneurship Development (SAED) more visible, lucrative and beneficial to participating Nigerians after the post-service year. Currently, only few of the beneficiaries of the skills acquisition training are persuaded to put it into practice, even with start-up packs extended to deserving participants.

    It is the responsibility of the NYSC management to appraise SAED and come up with appropriate recommendations that would make the scheme more effective, productive and beneficial to even youths outside the targeted participants. The requirements of such recommendations for improvement of SAED would either be fused into the Presidency’s subsisting social investments windows or forwarded to it separate consideration.

    This will blend with President Buhari’s vision for Nigerian youths. It is a sure path for reducing unemployment, over dependence of white-collar jobs, arrest youth restiveness and most importantly, make every Nigerian an active contributor to the peace, growth and development of Nigeria.

  • Masari advises NYSC members on post-camp training

    Katsina State Governor Aminu Bello Masari has urged members of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) posted to the state to embrace skill acquisition to make themselves self-reliant and financially independent.

    The governor said this was the reason his administration established the Youth Craft Village near the orientation camp.

    He said: “As corps members, the NYSC has deemed if feet to give you in-camps trainings on various skills through the Skill Acquisition and Entrepreneurship Development programme. For the post-camp trainings, the state government has Youth Craft village located on the premises (of the camp), which can compete with other centres in Africa.”

    The governor, who was represented by his Special Adviser (SA) on Youth Affairs, Alhaji Ibrahim Khalil Aminu, spoke in Katsina yesterday while closing ceremony for the Batch “C” Stream II of this year’s orientation course for corps members deployed to the state.

    He implored the corps members to accept their postings in good faith, assuring them of an exciting and fulfilling service year wherever they may be posted to serve in the state.

  • 2019:NYSC warns corps members against electoral offences

    Brig.-Gen. Suleiman Kazaure, the Director-General, National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) has warned corps members against electoral offences as 2019 general elections approach.

    The NYSC boss gave the warning during inspection visit to the 2018 Batch ‘C’ stream II orientation course at Kusalla in Karaye Local Government Area of Kano state.

    Kazaure was represented by the Scheme Director of Community Development Services (CDS) and special projects Mr Yusuf Steve.

    According to him, the electoral act has provided serious punishment for any of its officials or ad-hoc staff caught violating it.

    He said it became necessary, therefore, for the corps members to avoid acts capable of tarnishing their image, the scheme and eschew being used negatively by politicians during the 2019 general elections.

    Earlier, the NYSC Coordinator in the state, Alhaji Ladan Baba, said the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) had requested for the use of 44,000 corps members as adhoc staff during the election.

    According to him, the scheme can only provide the electoral body with over 15,000 ad-hoc staff to conduct the 2019 elections in the state.

    Baba also disclosed that the Kano NYSC has fished out the best three in each category of camp officials to be honoured.

    The coordinator said the decision to honour the best camp officials was due to their dedication, determination, honesty and commitment since the beginning of the exercise.

    Read Also: 2019: NYSC DG urges Corps members to be neutral

    “The NYSC officers and collaborating agencies have so far proved to be hard working, loyal and dedicated team players.

    Therefore, we have chosen the best among them to be honoured during our traditional award night,” he said.

    The coordinator commended the Federal Government, under the leadership of President Muhammadu Buhari, for introducing the Skills Acquisition and Entrepreneurship Development (SAED), during the orientation exercise.

    “Unemployment is one of the major challenges in the country; therefore, the introduction of the skills acquisition programme will help in reducing the challenges.

    “As a graduate, you must not wait for white collar-job, you can be the self reliant when you learn hand work, through which you can be the boss of yourself and even others”.

  • Kwara NYSC boss begs employers not to reject corps members

    Mrs Esther Tosin Ikupolati, National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) State Coordinator in Kwara, has appealed to employers of corps members not to reject those posted to their offices.

    Kupolati made the appeal on Monday while speaking with newsmen at the NYSC Permanent Orientation Camp at Yikpata, Edu Local Government Area of Kwara.

     

    “I advise the employers to help the Federal Government and help the scheme by accepting corps members posted to their offices for the primary assignments.

     

    “If the intervention call by NYSC is not there, what do you think would have happened? “These graduates in their thousands would be released from their universities and polytechnics to the labour market that is not there.

     

    “NYSC is a special intervention that takes these students, mould them and prepare them for the life ahead of them.

    “So for those that are rejecting corps members, they are not helping the Federal Government and they are not helping themselves, ‘’ Ikupolati said.

     

    The NYSC chief, therefore, appealed to employers in the state to look into the issue of accepting the corps members and prepare them for the future.

    Ikupolati also expressed concern over the porous nature of the orientation camp and the security implication to corps members and officials.

     

    She called on the state government to construct perimeter fence round the camp to make it secure for corps members and camp officials.

    The state coordinator agreed that the camp was large but added that the fencing could be done in phases.

     

    Read Also: Niger NYSC Camp is the worst ever – Kazaure

     

    Ikupolati said what she met on ground at the camp when she resumed four months ago was horrible, adding that most facilities were dilapidated.

    She said that she renovated one of the hostels in the camp from the Internally Generated Revenue and with the of the NYSC headquarters.

     

    According to her, I approached the Senate President, Bukola Saraki for assistance and after a lot of pressure on the senate president and persistent calls, he released the sum of N5.7 million for the renovation.

     

    Ikupolati said she used the money to renovate four hostels through direct labour; renovated the clinic; and procured drugs for treatment of corps members.

    The NYSC boss said that roads in the camp were all in deplorable conditions when she resumed. She said that she approached a Lebanese Construction Company that graded roads within the camp free of charge.

    “When I first approached the managing director of the construction company, he said I should pay a certain amount of money but after a month, he came and said he would the roads for us free, ‘’ Ikupolati said.

    NAN

     

  • Delta government assures corps members adequate welfare

    Delta Government on Monday assured the corp members that it placed high priority on their welfare and security.

    Governor  Ifeanyi Okowa made the assertion during the swearing-in of the Batch C Stream II corps members in Issele-Uku.

    Okowa, represented by the Commissioner for Higher Education, Mr Jude Sinebe, said that adequate security arrangements were on ground in the nooks and crannies of the state.

    He said that this was put in place to enable them go about their their lawful duties and that they should only recognise and respect the cultures and traditions of their host communities.

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    Okowa said that one of the national assignments they were expected to undertake was the 2019 general elections.

    He noted the NYSC over the years made a name for itself through its contribution to the successful conduct of elections in the country.

    He said joining in the scheme would afford them the opportunity to be part of the success stories recorded.

    Earlier, the state NYSC Cordinator, Mr Benjamin Omotade, said that 1,430 corps members comprising 780 females and 650 males were duly registered.

    Omotade reminded them that the task of building a united, prosperous and strong egalitarian society as they swore to uphold required commitment and hard work.

    He therefore, called on the corps members to roll-up their sleeves and get to work.

    He advised them to keep wholly to all the instructions and training that they would be given on camp.

    NAN