The move by the management of the
National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) to introduce online registration and
call-up of prospective Corps members has raised a lot of controversy which, if
not quickly addressed, might affect the activities of the organisation.
The full computerization of the
call-up process was approved at the meeting of the management in Calabar, and
aims to begin with the 2014 Batch “C” mobilisation exercise. Under the scheme,
prospective corps members are given the option of registering and processing
their call-up from the comfort of their homes or the nearest business centre if
they choose not to travel to their schools.
The snag, however, is that they have
to pay the sum of N4,000 to cover the cost of this computerized processing,
since the NYSC says, a private firm is handling the computerization project on
its behalf under a private/public partnership arrangement.
The concerns and outright rejection
of this project by well-meaning Nigerians is quite understandable, in the wake
of the Immigration job recruitment disaster in which job seekers were forced to
cough out N1,000 each to apply for the jobs. More than 20 young people lost
their lives in various centres.
The difference, however, is that the
NYSC insists that the N4,000 call-up registration is not compulsory.
Prospective corps members have merely been given the option to either save
themselves the old troubles of travelling to their schools for the call-up
letter, with the risks involved or simply option for the seamless
computerized registration.
The choice factor is very important,
as it will enable those who live quite close to their schools not to carry out
the online process and fee payment if they so wish. We, however, hope that
those who opt for the old style of registration will not be subjected to any
form of punitive sanction or disadvantage simply because they do not opt for
the computerised scheme.
We call on prospective corps members
who choose not to apply online to report any cases of victimisation, as this
will expose the genuine intentions or otherwise of those behind it.
It is a welcome development that the
House of Representatives has already waded into the matter with a view to
ensuring that the right thing is done in the public interest.
We advise the legislators not to be
carried away by sentiments but to focus on ensuring that when implemented the
rights of corps members to chose to register online or not are respected with
absolutely no room left open to the victimisation of those who prefer not to.
Particular attention should be paid
to the cost attached to the call-up registration to make sure that due
processes of the law were followed in arriving at it, and that the benefits are
commensurate with what corps members are required to pay.
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