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National Youth Service (Kenya)

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National Youth Service
AbbreviationNYS
Formation1964; 60 years ago (1964)
FounderGeoffrey Griffin
TypeNon-combatant Paramilitary and Civilian volunteer organisation
PurposeYouth mentor-ship
HeadquartersNairobi
FieldsTVET, Engineering, Agriculture, Textiles, Security

Turbo Field Unit Witu Field Unit Hindi Field Unit Garissa Mbalambala Field Unit Tana Basin Road Project Kirimun Field Unit

Kisumu Field Unit
Membership
Voluntary
Ag. Director General James Tembur
[1]
Key people
Lt Gen (rtd) Njuki Mwaniki (chairman)
Main organ
Governing Council
Parent organization
Ministry of Public Service, Youth and Gender Affairs
Budget (2019/2020)
Ksh 13.2 B (1,320,000 USD)
Staff (2019)
2,000
Volunteers (2019)
30,000
Websitenys.go.ke

The National Youth Service (NYS) is an organisation under the Government of Kenya. It was established in 1964 to train young people in important national matters. In 2019, the organization was transformed from a state department to a fully fledged semi-autonomous state corporation after enactment of NYS act, 2018[2]] by the Kenyan parliament.

National Youth Service officials in Nakuru
National Youth Service marching on street in Nakuru

The core business of NYS is to train and mentor Kenya's youth through :

  1. Paramilitary and regimentation .
  2. National building programs.
  3. Technical and vocational training in various skills and trades .

Enrollment

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Enrollment to the service is voluntary for Kenyan youth aged between 18 –22 years old . Upon enlistment, the recruits are subjected to rigorous non-combat paramilitary training for 6 months .

The recruits are required to offer at least 6 months of national service, which may include;

  • Construction
  • Vector control
  • Slums upgrade program
  • Traffic Control
  • Public security[3]
  • Agriculture

Before the late 1980s, students had to participate in the organisation before admission into universities. Today, recruitment is done on a volunteer basis.[4]

After successfully completing the compulsory national service, the recruits are sent to technical and vocational schools within NYS to train in various fields such as agriculture, engineering and hospitality. The training is free of charge to all recruits .

List of NYS TVET Colleges

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  • NYS Institute of Business Studies – Nairobi.
  • NYS Engineering Institute – Nairobi.
  • Nairobi Engineering Craft school – Nairobi.
  • NYS yatta college.
  • Textile & Garment Training Institute – Nairobi.
  • Advanced Building school – Gilgil.
  • NYS Technical college Mombasa.
  • Rural Craft Training Center – Turbo.
  • NYS driving school.
  • Plant operator school – Kerio Valley.
  • Early childhood college – Naivasha.
  • Vocational Training Institute – Nairobi
  • Catering and Hospitality School – Gilgil
  • On Job Training – Motor Transport Branch, Nairobi

History

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National Youth Service was established with the assistance of Israeli government, it was inspired by Nahal (fighting poineer youth) and GADNA (Youth battalion) models which combined military service and the establishment of agricultural settlements.

While in Israel the movement was necessary to deal with existential threats from Palestine and Arab world, in Kenya the model was attractive to the government to instill national values to the young people and to rehabilitate the freedom fighters (mau mau).

The Israeli had hoped to use the youth training as their entry point to Africa. And besides Kenya, they had such programmes in Nigeria, Tanzania and Uganda.

The crafting of the NYS could have started earlier than is publicly acknowledged.[5]

In mid-1959, Mboya had led a delegation to Israel where he – and other African leaders – had been introduced to the Gadna-Nahal movement, during a six-week seminar.

The conference was organised by the CIA-funded International Union of the Socialist Youth (IUSY), which frequently published Mboya's articles on African socialism.

Gadna was an acronym meaning youth formations, while Nahal meant fighting pioneer youth. These were youth organisations controlled and financed by the Israeli government to instil a sense of "national purpose", and to "conduct civic and social duties".

Upon his return to Nairobi, Mr Mboya told the press: "In Israel I have seen youths trained so that they are a source of pride to the nation, and they are readily available for all sorts of national work programmes".

As a result of the lessons learnt in Israel, Mboya hoped to transform the youth wing of his People's Congress Party into a formidable political tool.

It was this Mboya-Kariuki group that would work with the Israelis to set up the National Youth Service all as part of Israel's efforts to build close ties with the Kenyatta administration.

Kenya had hoped to adopt Israel's Nahal experiment in uniting the Kenyan tribes using the youth organisations. Israel also impressed upon president Kenyatta to embrace the Kibbutz idea – a collective community farming system staffed and operated by trained youth as pioneers.

In February 1966, a Motion was brought to Parliament by Embu's J.G. Mbogo seeking the disbandment of the Israeli-funded unit arguing that the youth were being trained "for somebody to stand up there and look very big".To protect the Israeli project from disbandment, it was included as part of disciplined forces in the April 1966 amendment of the Kenya Constitution.

Overall, the Nahal movement as crafted by the Israelis in East Africa failed.

Steven Carol,[6] a foreign policy scholar on the Nahal says that the East African experiment did not yield fruit because most of the youth were illiterate and unlike the Israelis "they had no avowed enemy, or marauding terrorists across the border".

With the failed NYS project, the Israelis now turned to training Kenyans in the field of intelligence and security.

Later, the Chinese took over the funding and introduced pre-university training which was later abandoned . Not to be left behind, the Italians helped set up the Nyayo-bus project which again collapsed.

Over the years, NYS has had to redefine itself to take a life of its own after the failed Israeli model. The first director, Geoffrey Griffin, a distinguished disciplinarian steered the organisation through the early turbulent years to stability (1964–1988). NYS remained an obscure and meagerly funded organisation government department for many years until 2013 when the president Uhuru Kenyatta government decided to make it a major institution for youth empowerment.

NYS budget was increased by 1000% in 2014, But there was problem; the organization had severely limited human resource capacity to manage huge budgets nor technical capacity to carry out the projects it claimed it could do . Many of the NYS rank and file have limited education, limited experience and poor ethical attitude to manage the huge budgets. Further the organization has over the years become unnecessarily over militarized therefore thwarting internal accountability and professionalism. What followed was massive misuse and monumental wastage of the public funds.

To address these challenges, the government in 2018 began a journey of reforms at NYS that was aimed at dealing with endemic integrity problems, building capacity and professionalizing the organization. NYS was made a parastatal with a council to run its affairs.

References

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  1. ^ "Former PS sworn in as NYS boss – VIDEO – Daily Nation". Nation.co.ke. 19 January 2016. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  2. ^ "Kenya Law: Home Page" (PDF). kenyalaw.org. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
  3. ^ Joseph Ndunda (4 August 2017). "180, 000 security officers to man Tuesday General Election | The Star, Kenya". The-star.co.ke. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  4. ^ Ayaga, Wilfred. "How Kenya's National Youth Service has evolved through the years to be what it is". The Standard. Retrieved 23 March 2018.
  5. ^ "Mboya, JM, and secret Israeli operations in NYS". Daily Nation. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
  6. ^ Bishku, Michael B. (2017). "Israel's Relations with the East African States of Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania—From Independence to the Present". Israel Studies. 22 (1): 76–100. doi:10.2979/israelstudies.22.1.04. ISSN 1084-9513. JSTOR 10.2979/israelstudies.22.1.04. S2CID 151870928.
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