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NYSC: What Are We Asking Our Youth to Risk?

There was a time when the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) felt like a rite of passage, not a roll of the dice.

Parents packed boxes with garri, pots, and prayers. Young graduates boarded buses with fear and excitement intertwined. You might land far from home, learn a new language, build lifelong friendships, or even fall in love. For many families, NYSC was more than compulsory service—it was proof that Nigeria could still be stitched together by its youth.

That dream was not foolish. For a time, it worked. People married across ethnic and religious lines. Trust slowly returned after the civil war. The country felt held together by something stronger than suspicion.

But nations evolve, and policies must evolve with them.

Today, service no longer feels like nation-building. It feels like a gamble with human lives.

Each time posting letters are released, anxiety spreads through Nigerian homes not the normal nervousness of leaving home, but the fear of kidnappers, bandits, terrorists, and random violence. Parents monitor news updates. Corps members whisper about redeployment as a survival strategy rather than an administrative option.

It is painful to admit, but young people are being asked to prove their patriotism in places where the state itself struggles to guarantee basic safety.

This is not fear-mongering; it is reality. Insecurity has spread across regions from the North East to parts of the North Central and even the South West. When corps members are kidnapped or killed, official responses often feel slow, distant, or wrapped in silence. In such moments, the khaki uniform stops symbolising unity and begins to look like a target.

Read also: Nigeria To Launch New Satellites For Improved Communication Coverage

Supporters argue that national integration requires sacrifice. That may sound noble, but sacrifice has limits. A nation cannot build unity on trauma or graves. Patriotism should not demand that parents bury children who only wanted to complete a compulsory year of service.

What makes this more troubling is the quiet transfer of responsibility. Once a corps member leaves camp, survival often depends on luck, community goodwill, or personal connections. That is not how a serious country treats its young graduates.

This does not mean NYSC should be scrapped. The idea behind it still matters. Shared experience and exposure still matter. But the structure must reflect the Nigeria of today, not the Nigeria of 1973.

Service should be flexible. Security risk should genuinely guide postings, not just on paper. Regional or zonal service should be considered without stigma. Community-based, digital, or skills-focused service options can still deliver national value without placing lives in constant danger.

Most importantly, the government must stop pretending everything is under control. Honesty builds trust, and courage drives reform.

When a state cannot protect its youth, clinging to tradition becomes cruelty dressed as patriotism. Nigeria does not lack young people willing to serve. What it lacks is a system that values their lives as much as their labour.

Unity is not forced by fear. It is built when people feel safe enough to believe in the country they are asked to serve.

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