A member of the House of Representatives, Hon. Philip Agbese, has urged President Bola Tinubu to immediately suspend the sweeping reforms to the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) recently approved by the Federal Executive Council.
Agbese, representing Ado/Okpokwu/Ogbadibo Federal Constituency and Deputy Spokesman of the 10th House of Representatives, described the changes as a dangerous shift that risks undermining the scheme’s core mandate of fostering national unity.
In a private letter to the President which which was leaked to the media, Agbese expressed deep patriotic concern, arguing that the reforms—framed as innovation and modernization—threaten to transform the NYSC from a symbol of national cohesion into a stratified administrative program.
He urged the President to halt implementation and convene a multi-disciplinary committee for thorough review, warning of potential damage to national security and cross-cultural integration.
“It is with a deep sense of patriotic duty and genuine concern for the future of national cohesion that I write to your esteemed office,” Agbese stated.
"As a committed believer in the Nigerian project, I have followed with alarm the recent Federal Executive Council (FEC) approval of sweeping reforms to the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC).
"The framing of these changes as ‘innovation’ and ‘modernization’ masks a dangerous shift that risks transforming a vital symbol of national unity into a hyper-stratified administrative exercise.
“The seven major pillars of the approved restructuring—transition to civilian operational leadership, extension of the orientation camp to six weeks, replacement of the traditional khaki uniform with Adire fabric, introduction of a structured three-phase training curriculum, pivot to skills-based deployment, automation of call-up processes, and institutionalization of formal graduation ceremonies—are fundamentally flawed,” he added.
The lawmaker highlighted the replacement of military leadership with civilian oversight as particularly alarming.
According to him, this move creates dangerous fragmentation in the command chain, especially since the scheme would still rely on military structures for security in high-risk areas.
He emphasised that a civilian Director-General might lack the tactical experience and authority needed for rapid response during threats to corps members.
Agbese further criticised the pivot toward skills-based deployment, saying it would institutionalize economic and social stratification by concentrating graduates from high-demand fields in urban centers while sending others to rural areas.
This, he argued, abandons the principle of blind geographic randomization that has promoted inter-ethnic empathy for decades.
“The most disturbing aspect is the replacement of military leadership with civilian leadership. Appointing a civilian Director-General while still relying on military structures for nationwide security creates dangerous fragmentation in the command chain,” Agbese wrote.
“A civilian bureaucrat, however competent, lacks the tactical experience, direct access to the defence hierarchy, and inherent authority required to coordinate rapid-response operations when corps members face threats in high-risk areas.
“The proposed ‘skills-based deployment’ framework is particularly troubling. By tying postings to academic disciplines and career streams instead of maintaining blind geographic randomization, the reform institutionalizes economic and social stratification,” he continued.
The replacement of the iconic khaki uniform with Adire fabric also drew sharp criticism from the deputy spokesman.
He described the traditional uniform as a powerful socio-economic equalizer that dissolves class and ethnic distinctions, and warned that the new localized fabric with variations in quality and pattern could encourage regional exceptionalism and ethnic silos.
Agbese also questioned the wisdom of extending the orientation camp from three to six weeks, citing the enormous additional costs in an era of economic hardship.
He argued that what should be a sharp paramilitary socialization experience risks becoming protracted and fatiguing, with little civic benefit.
“The decision to replace the iconic khaki uniform with Adire fabric further codifies this fragmentation. For over five decades, the simple, identical khaki uniform has served as a powerful socio-economic equalizer,” the letter reads.
“Introducing a localized, artisanal fabric with inherent variations in quality, pattern, and texture will erode this visual and psychological unity, inadvertently encouraging regional exceptionalism and ethnic silos.
“In the current climate of economic hardship and budgetary constraints, the additional cost of housing, feeding, and providing medical care for millions of graduates for an extra three weeks is enormous, with little demonstrable civic benefit,” Agbese noted.
The lawmaker portrayed the NYSC as a sacred national legacy born from the ashes of the civil war, designed specifically for radical national socialization rather than as a corporate talent incubator or skills-acquisition program.
He insisted that the reforms contradict this historic mandate and could permanently weaken the threads of unity the scheme has woven since 1973.
Agbese appealed directly to President Tinubu as the Grand Commander of the national heritage, urging an executive directive to halt the reforms and establish a high-level committee of historians, military strategists, constitutional lawyers, and other experts for comprehensive review.
He stressed that Nigerian youths deserve measures that strengthen security, improve allowances, and reinforce the program’s identity instead of dismantling it.
“The scheme was never intended to compensate for deficiencies in tertiary education or serve as a post-graduate vocational centre. It was deliberately designed as an instrument of radical national socialization — to pull young Nigerians from all backgrounds out of their ethno-geographic comfort zones and forge them into a shared civic identity through common service,” he explained.
“Your Excellency, the NYSC is a sacred national legacy, born from the blood and ashes of a brutal civil war to heal and unite a fractured nation. It was never meant to become a cultural fashion showcase or a corporate finishing school,” Agbese declared.
The letter concludes with a clarion call to protect the legacy of Nigeria’s founding fathers, safeguard the safety of the youth, and preserve the most important bridge across the nation’s fault lines.
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