Saturday, 13 September 2014

NYSC Defends N4,000 Per Call-Up Letter Policy - Says It's in Corps Members’ Interest

The National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) has defended its new  computerised mobilisation process, saying that it is not aimed  at exploiting prospective corps members as insinuated in some  quarters.

The NYSC introduced a new policy recently, asking corps members to pay N4,000 each before accessing their call-up letters online.

The agency’s Director of Press and Public Relations, Mrs  Olubunmi Aderibigbe, however, said in an interview with the News  Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja on Friday, that the new policy was in the interest of the corps members.

She said contrary to the false impression, the new process was  aimed at improving efficiency and reducing the stress  associated with the collection of call-up letters by  prospective corps members.

Aderibigbe said a number of factors were taken into  consideration before the new system was designed and launched.
“It is wrong for anyone to assert that NYSC is exploiting  prospective corps members through the new computerised process.

“Some people seem not to know what some of prospective corps  members go through before collecting their call-up letters;  many of them travel several kilometres away from their homes  just to get the call-ups.

“What we have done is in fact to reduce the cost and risks  associated with the collection of the call-ups and to eliminate  sharp practices associated with the old process,’’ she said.

The director wondered why some people would tag the new system  as exploitative, noting that many prospective corps members  spent more than N5,000 to get their call-ups.

She said the management of NYSC remained committed to the  welfare and wellbeing of corps members and would not in any way  exploit them.

According to Aderibigbe, the new system is a plus for the  management of the NYSC because it is a watershed in the history  of the agency.

She said that there was no way the mobilisation of prospective  corps members would remain the same with the introduction of  the new process.

Aderibigbe said the process would also enable Nigerian students  in the diaspora to get mobilised with relative ease, while  enhancing data sharing between schools and the agency.

She assured stakeholders in the sector that though the system  was in its early stage, efforts would be made to improve on  observed lapses to make it more user-friendly.

Culled from Nigerian Tribune

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