Opinion
NYSC: A Stitch In Time …
I heard that the Independent National Electoral
Commission (INEC) and the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) had concluded plans to deploy NYSC members as electoral officials across the country.
The Director-General of NYSC, Brigadier-General Johnson Olawumi, was quoted by the media confirming that an agreement had been reached with INEC on the matter. The military chief also made the usual promise of provision of security, logistics and stipends for the corpers.
Just to assure Nigerians that things will be different and done differently this time around, the NYSC director-general said corpers to be deployed for the assignment would be barred from giving out sensitive electoral materials and would be prohibited from accepting financial inducements from politicians. But the question is was there a time when corpers were not restrained from either giving out sensitive electoral materials or taking financial inducements from politicians?
The plan by both agencies has caused some Nigerians to express an assortment of curiosities about President Goodluck Jonathan’s thinking on the proposal. However, indications emerged that the President supports the plan when he recently enjoined corps members to brace up for an active role in next year’s election.
Because of the shortage of INEC personnel to effectively man electoral activities in the country, it has become a tradition to engage corps members as ad hoc staff in election for many years. Ordinarily, there shouldn’t be any issue with that, especially if they are trained on basic electoral processes and are provided adequate security.
My concern is their safety. The lives of these young Nigerians must not be jeopardized any more for whatever reasons. If we must use corpers for the next general election, it is absolutely necessary to provide water tight security for them and they must not be sent to volatile parts of the country. The reason is clear to everyone. Some areas in the north have become a safe haven and killing fields for insurgents. INEC that intends to use them for this precarious project must not lose sight of that fact.
The grisly post-election violence in some parts of the north following the 2011 presidential election, which claimed the lives of some corps members who served as electoral officials, remain fresh in our memory.
Considering the importance of 2015 election and the desperation of some contending politicians and their interest to win at all cost, we don’t need a soothsayer to say that the election will be bloodier than that of 2011 unless measures are consciously taken to avert it. And so the lives of corps members should not be risked by involving them in electoral duties without guaranteed security.
In addition to the precarious parts of the north as stated earlier, there are volcanic areas in the south where the lives of youth corpers could also be endangered. They may become victims of electoral violence, while some may get into trouble through inducements by desperate politicians.
Much as I support efforts that will enhance the integrity of our electoral process through the use of competent hands, it is important that electoral officers are safe while they perform their duties, particularly the corps members who may be deployed for the critical assignment against their will.
Also, care must be taken in both the Ekiti and Osun States gubernatorial election scheduled to hold in June and August respectively, where corps members are expected to be utilized as electoral officials. The situation calls for extreme caution. Corpers should not be used for this election without proper arrangement for their safety and security.
It is expedient that we learn from past mistakes and avert any danger to corpers who are vulnerable to attacks given that they are usually strangers in the states and communities they are posted to serve. INEC has to avoid a repeat of the derogatory incident that occurred in the Anambra governorship election last November when a corper was arrested for absconding with electoral materials.
The security of corps members is an issue that must not be toyed with by any government. For the NYSC authorities, they have to insist on getting a guarantee for the safety of their members before they are released for the assignment or else they should not be unleashed. It is better we have flawed election than waste the lives of our corpers. Let no one say I did not warn. After all, is it not said that a stitch in time saves nine?
Arnold Alalibo
Opinion
Kudos Gov Fubara
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