NYSC Asks Corps Members To Get Someone Ready To Pay Ransom While Traveling On High Risk Roads

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NYSC Corp membersManagement of National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) has updated its handbook on security awareness to reflect the poor state of security in the country.

The commission informed corps members on the possibility of being kidnapped while serving their fatherland.

In its updated handbook on security awareness and education, the scheme urged serving corps members to have someone to pay their ransom in case they are kidnapped while traveling on high risk road.

A section of the handbook, which has since gone viral on social media states;

When travelling on high risks roads such as Abuja-Kaduna, Abuja-Lokoja-Okene or Aba-Port Harcourt roads, then alert your family members, friends and colleagues, in order to have someone on hand to pay off the ransom that could be demanded.

In another section of the handout, the NYSC also warned serving corps members against travelling with communication gadgets like laptops and cell phones because kidnappers would charge them according to their worth.

The section reads;

In this period of ICT, do not travel with communication gadgets like laptops, iPad, handsets, and other electronic facilities that you stored personal information such as finances, net worth, investment, and business dealings as kidnappers will charge according to your worth.


Since a copy of the handbook surfaced online, NYSC has severely been criticised for asking corps members to get their families and friends ready for ransom when they travel on high-risk roads.

At a time when kidnappers invade schools and abduct pupils unrestrained, the NYSC handbook on security amplifies the fear that the safety and security of serving corps members are not guaranteed.

While many Nigerians have called for the scrapping of the scheme, others have called on lawyers to sue the Federal Government for putting the lives of Nigerian youths in danger through the NYSC scheme and sending youths to high-risk states.

NYSC was established in 1973 after the civil war to involve Nigerian graduates in nation-building and development as well as to promote national unity.

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