Federal Government has overruled the National Youth
Service Corps on the redeployment of corps members from troubled states.
Minister of Youth Development, Alhaji
Inuwa Abdulkadir, said this at a news conference in Abuja on Tuesday.
Abdulkadir insisted that corps members would be posted to Borno, Yobe and other
troubled states.
His positing supersedes an earlier
concession granted to the affected corps members by the Director-General of the
NYSC, Brig.-General Nnamdi Okore-Affia.
The DG, had in a statement on July 5
directed corps members posted to Yobe to proceed to Nasarawa State, while those
scheduled to have their orientation in Borno were directed to Benue State.
The minister argued that the issue of
posting of corps members to states other than their states of origin was
enshrined in the relevant laws establishing the scheme.
Abdulkadir said any other form of
concessional posting of corps members apart from the grounds of health and
marriage would require constitutional amendment.
On the resolution passed by the House
of Representatives, he said the position of the ministry remained the position
of the law.
The House had in a resolution said
the NYSC should halt posting of corps members to troubled states.
The minister said, “Talking about the
National Assembly’s resolution vis-a vis our position here. My position is that
of the law.
“The fundamental thing is that the
NYSC is a constitutional issue; the constitution of the Federal Republic of
Nigeria, which is supreme.
“Of course, the NYSC initially was
established through a military decree in 1973 because of its potential to the
existence of Nigeria as a nation.
“And in pursuance of a deliberate
policy to set up something that will always and continue to integrate Nigerians
and bring about harmony amongst Nigerians, among other things, the framers of
the 1979 Constitution deemed it fit to make the NYSC law part of the constitution.
” So if you are going to make any
amendment to the NYSC or alter anything, you have to alter the constitution.
That is the position.
“In that regard, posting of corps
members to states, apart from their own, except in some special circumstances,
is governed by the law and must be adhered to.”
He recalled that many Nigerians died
during the civil war.
The minister stated, “Don’t forget
that a number of people went to the civil war. A number of Nigerians went to
the war front they were killed they left families.
“There are people who up till now who
for no fault of theirs because by circumstances they were born during the
period of the war they were not armed they got incapacitated. They have
disabilities and they are living with those disabilities because of the war.
This is a sacrifice to the nation.”
He criticised the protest by some
corps members in Abuja, saying at the time of the protest the protesters, who
wore NYSC uniform, had not registered.
Abdulkadir said, “How did they even
get uniforms to wear? If they are really mobilised to go and serve where did
they get the corpers’ uniform to come and assemble before the office of the
NYSC to say they are protesting that they want to go or will not go.”
Just Imagine! so he's saying that the Nigerian constitution supersedes human life? just because people died during the war then students should willingly go and die for Nigeria? NA WA O! God help us all.
ReplyDeleteThe goat of a minister seriously unwell and needs medical attention. Where are his children? Probably in some schools abroad and he has the effrontery to compare the civil war to NYSC. Shows you how wicked our government is. He should send his own children to Borno state instead
ReplyDeleteMOst senseless reasoning I have heard in years. Comparing NYSC to civil war or military service. If I come across this man, I will spit on him.
ReplyDelete