Yola – Youths in Adamawa have rejected the N40,000 registration fee charged by the Nigeria Peace Corps for the ongoing recruitment.
The frustrated youths expressed their anger in separate interviews with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Yola on Wednesday.
They questioned the rationale behind the high registration fee, adding that it is a ploy to disfranchise them.
NAN reports that the passage of the bill into the law for the establishment of the Nigeria Peace Corps has passed its second reading at the National Assembly.
Mr Mohammed Salisu, 32, a graduate from Mayo-Belwa Local Government Area, complained that he spent N1,500 to purchase the recruitment form.
“After I filled the form, on submission I was directed to pay an additional N40,000 for registration at First Bank which will qualify me to be a full officer of the organization,’’ he alleged.
Salisu said his family was struggling to raise the money and had even resolved to sell their farm land to enable him realize his dream of becoming an officer of the Corps.
Also complaining, Mr Istifanus Dauda, 25, from Yola North Local Government Area of the state, said that the exorbitant registration fee prevented him from joining the corps.
Dauda, who is an orphan, said his father died when he was in secondary school and had to be sponsored by his mother and relatives to obtain a Diploma in Criminology from the Adamawa State Polytechnic.
“Honestly speaking, I don’t know where to get such an amount, in spite of the fact that I want to join the corps to render my services to my country, I am handicapped,’’ he said.
The duo called on the Federal Government to look into the matter and ease the recruitment process to enable thousands of vulnerable youths join the organization.
Confirming the development, Mr Sunday Jamali, the Deputy Commander, Administration of the Nigeria Peace Corps, Adamawa Command, said that all screened candidates had paid N40, 000 before being registered.
“This year, no less than 500 candidates registered in the state and each of them paid N40,000 into the organization’s bank account,’’ Jamali said.
He explained that the fee was to enable the corps train the successful candidates as well as to provide them with uniforms and other accessories.
According to him, the national headquarters of the organization was aware of the development.