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National Service Or National Suffering?

Sun, 17 Oct 2010 Source: Amadu, Umaru Sanda

“Charlie, where dem send you to?”

“Oh Charlie, some yawa koraa oh!”

“Why? Wetin happen?”

“The man take me go some village for Upper West say make I go teach.”

“Teach? You are not serious. You no fill out your form proper?”

“I fill say I dey read Communication Studies but still…”

“So which village be that?”

Well. That sounds like the transcribed conversation from a tapped phone line. But

thank God I haven’t started doing that yet. I leave it to my seniors in the

journalism profession to do in the meantime.

It’s a conversation I had with a friend who graduated with me from the Ghana

Institute of Journalism. The poor young man was complaining about his National

Service posting.

This type of conversation, no doubt, is taking place among friends and families

across the country through telephone exchanges and social networking sites among a

host of several other platforms.

The complaints are the same and the complainants also remain the same – tertiary

institution graduates. The defendant? National Service Secretariat - or should I

say, National Service Director and his response has always been the same: “National

Service is a state duty and you are obliged to serve”.

You are right sir. But to begin with, the secretariat asked all graduating

university students to fill a form online stating clearly the courses they read,

regions they wished to be posted and their marital status among others.

The latter, however, is not clear to me because one’s marital status does not

reflect in the allowance he/she gets so why ask him? But that’s not my worry.

If I studied engineering, society expects me to work as an engineer and likewise

when I study communications, I’m expected to communicate. In any case, this is

explicitly stated on the NSS form so why send me to be a nurse when I don’t even

know what paracetamol cures or how to dispense drugs written on a doctor’s

prescription form?

There’s a saying that goes thus: “No pig gives birth to a calf and no frog gives

birth to a lizard”. If that happens, we call it oddity and oddity is very close to

impossibility.

My friend jokingly asked me a question during our conversation. He said: “Why? I dey

go teach sociology and philosophy to the kiddies for Class 1?”

That question sounded funny but it means a lot. One can best perform in what one has

knowledge about. Teaching children at that age, I’m made to understand, requires a

lot of experience, skills and patience. Trust me, not every university graduate can

provide these to a child.

I listened to the NSS Executive Director, Mr. Kuagbenu the other day on Citi FM

suggesting that, if these university graduates can assist their junior brothers and

sisters to do their assignments, then they can also teach primary school children.

I beg to differ, sir. Does being able to assist my junior brother at home mean I

can pass as the class teacher of a whole class, tolerating everything and being able

to teach everything they really need?

Would it not be proper if we gave a solid foundation to these children at this stage

by assigning trained teachers to them rather than this shaky and unsure beginning?

So you post me to an area I have no knowledge or (maybe) interest in, and you trust

that I will perform? That surely creates room for redundancy in the office.

I pity my colleagues who have been sent that far from home. National Service

reserves the right to post personnel to any part of the country.

However, there is the need to consider where these people will put up for the

one-year duty call. It is true people travel across the country and even abroad for

work and other endeavors. But they do this with a clear accommodation assurance

before they set off.

Unless they are hustlers - and I know Ghana’s Service personnel are not hustlers -

they deserve accommodation.

Sadly, many of my colleagues tell me they have to go around town to look for

accommodation in “Atakpames” in the various villages.

But what happens if you are rejected by the organization or institution you’ve been

sent to?

I felt bad interviewing some guys for Citi FM who told me they were posted from the

southern parts of Ghana to the Ghana Broadcasting Corporation offices in the Upper

East Region only to be told their services were not needed there.

According to the group, the GBC Upper East Director told them GBC requested no

National Service personnel.

That’s sad.

My poor friends had to waste transportation all the way to Bolgatanga only to be

told their services were not needed. Will they be given any transport allowance? I

wonder!

They told me they had to sleep at the car park because they were clearly in a

strange land with no pre-arranged places of accommodation for them.

Which kind of wahala is this?

First you were sent to a region you haven’t chosen, then you are given a job you

have no expertise in and as if that is not enough, you get tossed up and down

without a place to take some little rest. Must we go through all these when it could

have been simple?

All I want to say is that National Service is a civic duty, but it must be National

Service and not National Suffering. Everybody must be happy serving their nation.

Not the other way round.

Umaru Sanda Amadu www.umarusco.blogspot.com [email protected]

Columnist: Amadu, Umaru Sanda