Tinubu Finally Speaks on Overhaul of NYSC Scheme, Shares Reform Details

President Tinubu has shared details of the overhaul of the National Youth Service Corps scheme following its approval by the Federal Executive Council.

Ondopress that the approval on Monday marks the first comprehensive reform of the program since its establishment 53 years ago.

The Minister of Youth Development, Ayodele Olawande, initially announced the reform following the council meeting at the Presidential Villa in Abuja, explaining that the updates are designed to align the 1973 national service scheme with Nigeria’s modern realities and economic goals.

The extensive review process, which originally began in 2025, aims to transform the institution into a productivity-focused platform. To solidify these operational changes, the Federal Executive Council has directed the Attorney-General of the Federation and the Ministry of Youth Development to immediately begin amending the NYSC Act and its regulations.
Under the new structural updates, the traditional three-week orientation camp will be extended into a revamped six-week journey focusing heavily on civic responsibility, leadership, digital literacy, and entrepreneurship.

Corps members will receive specialized training across eleven career streams, including agriculture, health, education, technology, law, public service, infrastructure, green economy, enterprise, creative economy, and para-military or security service. The changes also introduce a redesigned uniform that reflects professionalism, a technology-driven call-up process, and skills-based primary assignments tailored to academic backgrounds.

To improve safety, deployments to security-challenged states will be guided by risk assessments that prioritize indigenes, residents, and local graduates.

Furthermore, orientation camps will face a national grading system, a civilian Director-General will take over operational leadership with military support for security, and the traditional Passing Out Parade will officially be replaced by a formal Graduation Ceremony.

Sharing the details of the historic reform on social media, President Tinubu linked the policy directly to his administration’s promises regarding youth inclusion and economic expansion.

“On Monday, at the Federal Executive Council, our administration approved the most consequential reforms of the National Youth Service Corps Scheme since its establishment in 1973,” the President shared.

Reaffirming his commitment to empowering the younger generation, Tinubu wrote, “On the day I was sworn in as your President, I promised to create meaningful opportunities for our young people.

I said women and youth would feature prominently in our administration, and this reform is partly the actualisation of that promise.”

The President maintained that the country’s massive youth demographic must be actively harnessed to drive economic progress rather than being treated as a societal hurdle.

“For 53 years, the NYSC has served the cause of national unity. That mission remains important and must be preserved. But the Nigeria of today demands more,” Tinubu said.

Outlining the ultimate vision for the repositioned program, he added, “Our young people are nearly 70 per cent of our population. They are not a burden to be managed… They are the engine of the one-trillion-dollar economy we are building and the hope of this nation. We are repositioning the NYSC from a mobilisation scheme into a national development platform for skills, employability, productivity and enterprise.”

The president’s statement reads in full:

On Monday, at the Federal Executive Council, our administration approved the most consequential reforms of the National Youth Service Corps Scheme since its establishment in 1973.

On the day I was sworn in as your President, I promised to create meaningful opportunities for our young people. I said women and youth would feature prominently in our administration, and this reform is partly the actualisation of that promise.

For 53 years, the NYSC has served the cause of national unity. That mission remains important and must be preserved.

But the Nigeria of today demands more.

Our young people are nearly 70 per cent of our population. They are not a burden to be managed… They are the engine of the one-trillion-dollar economy we are building and the hope of this nation.

We are repositioning the NYSC from a mobilisation scheme into a national development platform for skills, employability, productivity and enterprise.

The NYSC orientation programme will now become a six-week journey.

It will begin with civic responsibility, leadership, values and personal development. It will then move into career readiness, entrepreneurship, digital and financial skills. Finally, corps members will receive specialised training aligned with their academic background and career pathway.

These streams will include agriculture, health, education, technology, law, public service, infrastructure, green economy, enterprise, creative economy, and para-military/security service.

Every corps member must leave NYSC better prepared for work, enterprise and national service.