“A Heavy Burden Masquerading as a Solution”: Why Prominent Critics Want Tinubu to Pause NYSC Reforms

On June 29, 2026, the federal executive council (FEC) approved a civilian leadership structure and new uniform for the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) in seven key reforms to reposition the 53-year-old scheme for greater efficiency.


​Defending the overhaul, President Bola Tinubu emphasized that the changes are designed to shift the NYSC away from a merely symbolic integration model.

According to the President, the new policy aims to equip young Nigerian graduates with practical, market-ready skills, transforming them into active drivers of national development and economic self-reliance.

The announcement has split public opinion. Supporters of the administration have commended the initiative, urging the government to fast-track its implementation. They argue that injecting skill acquisition, specialized career streams, and structural modernization is the exact intervention needed to solve Nigeria’s brewing youth unemployment crisis.

​However, the counter-arguments have echoed far louder across the public square. Critics—including public officials, prominent policy analysts, and educators,—have raised serious concerns over the practical realities of the overhaul.

Rather than offering real solutions, skeptics warn that the reforms introduce an unsustainable burden, specifically pointing to the logistical strain of doubling the orientation camp duration, potential security vulnerabilities of a demilitarized leadership, and a failure to address immediate welfare and safety needs on the ground.

For political economist Professor Anthony Kila, the Director of the Commonwealth Institute of Advanced and Professional Studies, the administration has mistaken mere administrative tinkering for genuine visionary overhaul.

Describing the package as “a wrong step in the right direction,” Kila contends that extending the orientation camp to six weeks is a superficial adjustment masquerading as strategic transformation.

​”The reforms improve yesterday’s answers without questioning yesterday’s questions,” Kila argued, noting that the policy fails to define what civic service should mean in a digital, 21st-century economy. Instead of forced participation, he advocates for an entirely voluntary, prestigious, and highly competitive leadership academy.

Hon. Philip Agbese, Deputy Spokesperson of the House of Representatives and a member of the House Committee on Youth and Defence, has urgently called on President Tinubu to halt implementation.

Agbese warns that narrowing the NYSC’s focus down to a glorified skill acquisition center is inherently unhealthy for the state.

​Agbese points out that splintering the corps into 11 specialized career streams risks diluting the scheme’s foundational mandate: fostering national unity and patriotism.

Furthermore, he strongly opposes stripping the military of its leadership role.

“Military tradition is essential for instilling discipline and maintaining national preparedness,” Agbese stated, warning that transitioning to a civilian Director-General could compromise camp security and command structure.

Public affairs analyst and seasoned journalist, Reuben Abati, PhD, raised alarms over the severe lack of broad-based stakeholder engagement before an overhaul of this magnitude was finalized.

Abati argues that rapidly imposing sweeping statutory modifications without deep, transparent consultation with the public and relevant institutions creates an immediate deficit of trust and operational clarity.

Kemisola Odejide, a seasoned educator, tagged the policy as completely “ill-timed,” pointing out that doubling the orientation period from three to six weeks is reckless when the government has failed to fix chronic, foundational deficiencies.

Odejide notes that corps members are routinely subjected to sub-par feeding, dilapidated accommodation, broken healthcare access, and agonizing delays in their monthly allowances.

She also threw her weight against replacing the iconic khaki uniform with indigenous textiles like Adire, maintaining that the classic khaki remains a vital visual equalizer that strips away ethnic and socio-economic divisions.

Ekemini Ido, a corporate employer, argues that the federal government is misusing national service to bandage a broken tertiary education system.

​”If university graduates are leaving higher education unequipped for the modern workforce, the root fix belongs in reforming the higher education curriculum itself,” Ido observed.

“You do not patch university failures by stretching out a national service camp.”

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Lawal Sodiq Adewale aka CHOCOMILO is an award winning journalist. Mail me at Chocomilo@withinnigeria.com. See full profile on Within Nigeria's TEAM PAGE
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