Nigeria,
 our dear country, is one place where really very bizarre things happen.
 Often times, happenings here leave one wondering how those in 
authorities arrive at certain decisions that affect us all. Prof. Wole 
Soyinka once suggested that policymakers in Nigeria, in a bid to fleece 
the system, organise a dodgy contraption as a means to their shady ends. 
This
 is the case of the National Youth Service Corps under the leadership of
 Brig. Gen. Johnson Bamidele Olawumi. Under this fine gentleman, the 
NYSC has introduced a policy that is nothing short of pure wickedness in
 action. Intending corps members who are mandated to serve the country 
for one year are to cough up N4,000 to be able to access their call-up 
letters online.
 
The NYSC has tried rather too 
unconvincingly to justify this apparent kick in the teeth. According to 
the organisation, the N4, 000 which intending corps members are asked to
 pay will reduce the hardship usually experienced by them in getting 
their call-up letters! Of course, the NYSC is very much aware of the 
fact that prospective corps members are graduates who went through the 
biblical hell to graduate from Nigerian citadels of learning. 
Ordinarily,
 government has the responsibility to make the lives of the governed 
more humane; the NYSC is an agency of the Federal Government saddled 
with the job of mobilising young graduates to undergo the compulsory 
one-year national service. Tapping from the responsibility of the state,
 the NYSC must be seen to be ameliorating the lives of corps members. 
But in this instance, it is doing the opposite. 
Why intending 
corps members must be made to pay any money to access their call-up 
letters online beats any imagination. Who is the consultant that runs 
the online portal for the NYSC? How much does it cost to access 
something as simple as an email online? 
The creepy fact is that 
government agencies in Nigeria appear to be celebrating a culture of 
unbridled impunity. Not long ago, the Nigeria Immigration Service 
arranged a sham in the name of a recruitment and forced job-seekers to 
pay N1,000 each. The rip-off recruitment was so poorly arranged that 
about 20 young Nigerian citizens lost their lives tragically. 
Nigerians
 screamed obscenities at the NIS, prying questions were asked, human 
rights groups rose up in condemnation; at the end of the day, just like 
every other happening in Nigeria, the government of President Goodluck 
Jonathan set up a panel of enquiry to look into the tragic episode. The 
government announced its regrets at the loss of human lives, promised to
 employ family members of those that died…and we all went to sleep. 
Of
 course, the Minister of Interior, Mr. Abba Moro, retained his post 
while the families that lost loved ones buried them amid tears. Again, 
Nigerians went to sleep, and thanked God for little mercies. 
Almost
 a year has passed after the ugly incident, nobody has seen or heard 
anything about our government keeping its words. True to our tag as the 
“happiest people on earth”, Nigerians scratched their heads in 
wonderment, went back to sleep…and of course, thanked God for little 
mercies. God dey sha, we murmured. 
Taking this a step further, 
the surprising thing is that the Federal Government appears to have gone
 to sleep on this unfolding penchant for official impunity. Reportedly, 
Mr. President is striving towards transforming the country for the 
better and one would expect his handlers to be quick to caution the NYSC
 for such an inhuman and outrageous adventure. Not, for the Jonathan 
administration. 
What government institutions like the NIS and 
the NYSC are doing would seem to be rubbishing the transformation agenda
 of President Goodluck Jonathan. What with the untold hardship being 
heaped on hapless Nigerian youths who voted for President Jonathan. And 
the 2015 general elections are just by the corner! 
The two 
chambers of the National Assembly have failed Nigerians miserably; 
uncharitable government policies like the one under review would have 
attracted the wrath of the overindulged lawmakers if we were fortunate 
to have a caring and responsive legislature. They are the 
representatives of the Nigerian people who by virtue of our votes, ought
 to be fighting for us, the downtrodden masses of this great country. 
This
 is a clarion call for the National Association of Nigerian Students (or
 whatever is left of the body), to rise up and challenge this wicked 
policy of the NYSC. This ruthless N4, 000 levy has presented a brilliant
 window of opportunity for all the human rights groups in the country to
 stand up for the youths of this nation. The NYSC must be made to 
rescind this ugly policy for it is evil and extremely unpopular. 
There
 are so many rip-off policies dancing around in Nigeria, there are so 
many wicked man-made hardships directed by those in positions of 
authority at the long-suffering people of Nigeria. The level of poverty,
 want, disease and sadness in Nigeria is spiralling by the day; we don’t
 need more. My sincere plea to the President of Nigeria is to rise up to
 the occasion and force the NYSC to beat a retreat from the path of 
extorting hapless graduates. 
The 2015 general elections are just
 a few months away; the youths of Nigeria are watching with a keen 
interest. May President Goodluck Jonathan see the wisdom in beaming the 
gaze of his Transformation Agenda at the NYSC and transform that body 
for the better. For all anyone cares to know, let us all rise to say No 
to N,4000 fee for call-up letters!

Another example of "Official Extortion" by Govt Agencies. If this and others are indeed public knowledge, one really wonders how come the President says nothing. Shine your eyes in 2015, Naija.
ReplyDelete