FG sets up committee to overhaul NYSC scheme, plans to establish teachers’, medical corps

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The federal government has set up a committee to carry out major changes to the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC). Inaugurating the committee on Tuesday in Abuja, the Minister of Youth Development, Ayodele Olawande, noted that the NYSC has played an important role in building national unity and helping young people since it was east in 1973.
He explained that the decision to carry out major changes followed rising concerns about the safety of corps members, poor facilities, and whether the NYSC still fits into today’s social and economic realities.
According to the minister, the goal is to make the scheme stronger, more useful to national growth, and better suited to the needs of Nigerian youths.
“The issues of corps members’ safety, infrastructural challenges, and the broader question of the scheme’s relevance in an increasingly dynamic socio-economic environment are among the key concerns.
“However, these challenges also present opportunities that require urgent, visionary, and determined action”, the minister said.
Olawande said the committee will look into how NYSC works and suggest ways to make it safer, more creative, and more impactful.
“The outcome of this review must align with broader national development objectives, positioning the NYSC as a strategic tool for youth empowerment and nation-building,” he added.
He explained further that the committee will review current NYSC policies, talk to people across the country and suggest changes to laws, policies, and how the scheme is run.
He said the committee will also come up with better ways to fund, track and improve the NYSC.
Also speaking at the event, the Minister of Education, Maruf Tunji Alausa, said the government planned to start a Teachers’ Corps and a Medical Corps.
These, according to him, will be for NCE graduates and healthcare workers ready to serve in rural areas.
He said, “The Teachers’ Corps would help bridge educational gaps and create a pathway to government employment, while the Medical Corps would strengthen healthcare delivery in underserved areas, addressing critical issues such as maternal and child health.”