he Federal Government has issued queries to 42
universities for allegedly charging more than the N2,000 instructed by the
Federal Ministry of Education to conduct their 2017 post-Unified Tertiary
Matriculation Examinations.
This was made known on Tuesday by the Registrar
of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board, Prof. Is-haq Oloyede, at a
stakeholders’ meeting on the 2018 UTME in Abuja.
The JAMB registrar said one of the vice-chancellors who could not trace the
affected candidates, was instructed by the Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu,
to give the excess to a non-religious orphanage as charity.
Oloyede said, “There are
42 institutions queried by the minister for charging more than N2,000 for the
post-UTME. The affected universities are now refunding the excess to the
candidates and the candidates are reporting back to us. In one case where the
university could not trace the affected students, the minister directed that the
money should be paid to a non-religious orphanage.
“The candidates in that
case could not be traced for a refund. Hence, the minister has put his feet
down that all excess charges should be refunded. Where the universities have
the list, they are paying the candidates directly.
“The purpose of this
stakeholders’ meeting is to brief those officials who will be on the
field for the 2018 UTME. We also reviewed the incidents of 2017 and welcomed
recommendations from the stakeholders. The UTME Mock Examination will hold in
the first week of February 2018 and the concerned Computer-Based Test centres
have been accredited. As we have earlier announced, the UTME will hold from
March 9 to 17, 2018.”
Oloyede added that the
board had implemented some “new prohibitions” for the 2018 UTME in order to
check examination malpractices.
He added“We have
prohibited some additional materials during the 2018 UTME in the examination
hall. These include wristwatches, biros, calculators, pencils except the HB
Pencil, and any other device that can store data, transmit or receive signal no
matter the form. These prohibitions are not only applicable to the candidates
but also to all examination officials.”
When our correspondent
contacted the Federal Ministry of Education, authoritative sources confirmed
the queries issued to the 42 universities, but declined to give their
identities.
It was learnt that the
vice-chancellors of the affected universities had been responding to the
queries and refunding the excesses.
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