Prospective Unlag students protested yesterday during their screening for admission for 2015/2016 session |
JAMB
registrar, Prof. Dibu Ojerinde is being paid to selectively divert candidates
to private universities against the wish of applicants, Dotun Sodunke, the
President of the Association of Tutorial Center Operators (ATCO), has alleged.
"A series of frauds
have been going on in JAMB, and this is the right time to end it because I
trust President Muhammadu Buhari to do justice to this," he said at a
protest in UNILAG.
Metro News reports:
The tutor alleged that the board has deceived and defrauded candidates of the JAMB examination for several years.
The tutor alleged that the board has deceived and defrauded candidates of the JAMB examination for several years.
The selling of
"Change of Institutions and Courses" forms is a particularly
questionable practice, Mr. Sodunke said. "Since JAMB knew it would still
randomly allocate the candidates to institutions by its own discretion, why did
it in the first place sell forms for them to change their choices, [only] to
later allocate them at will to non-chosen institutions?" he posed.
A horde of post-JAMB candidates and some parents also came to the UNILAG
campus, protesting decisions of the board to change their institutions, which
they said they did not choose.
The Nation reports that prospective University of Lagos (UNILAG)
students protested yesterday during their screening for admission for 2015/2016
session.
UNILAG’s Registrar Dr Taiwo Ipaye said only 9,000 of the 32,000
applicants were eligible for screening.
Ipaye said the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB)
considered a lot of options at its 2015 Combined Policy Meeting held on July 4,
as a way out for the candidates.
“JAMB had during that meeting adopted a policy whereby
candidates of universities with surplus applicants for the Unified Tertiary
Matriculation Examination (UTME) are reassigned to other universities with
lower number of candidates, than their capacities.
“This will be beneficial to needy universities; as this will
ensure that they will have more candidates to admit.
“This policy has been implemented with immediate effect and
consequently, the eligibility for post- UTME screening in the University of
Lagos like other universities in country, has been determined by JAMB.
“In effect, only candidates, whose names were forwarded to the
University of Lagos by JAMB, are eligible for the 2015/2016 post-UTME,’’ she
said.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that some of parents, who
brought their children for the exercise, expressed disappointments over the
applicants’ exclusion from the JAMB’s list of shortlisted candidates.
A parent, Dr Ben Emone, told NAN that his son made UNILAG
his first choice, and scored 260 marks in the UTME.
According to him, it has been the tradition of the university to
peg its cut-off mark, at least, at 200 for the post-UTME.
Emone criticized the university and JAMB for the sudden change
in procedure, saying:
“I will not take this whole thing they are trying to explain
because my son passed the UTME convincingly. If there was to be any change, we
should have been sensitized well ahead of time and not just waking-up one
morning to change the rule of the game. All I am saying is that my son must
write this post-UTME or nobody will.
Association of Tutorial School Operators (ATSO) National
President Mr Oludotun Sodunke blamed the crisis on the JAMB Registrar, Prof.
Dibu Ojerinde.
He said Ojerinde was insensitive to parents’ plights, adding
that the JAMB registrar was wrong to have introduced such last minute decision
after pegging the cut-off mark at 180.
“I think Prof. Ojerinde has some questions to answer on this
whole issue. There must be something he is not telling the public. Ojerinde
must stop running JAMB as if it is his personal business empire.
“How can Ojerinde impose such high and unacceptable cutoff marks
for five notable public universities in Nigeria under the guise of catchment,
to qualify for post-UTME, and you expect us not to protest.
“The worst case scenario at least ought to have been the normal
200 marks and above, which universities like UNILAG and others were known for.
“If there must be anything new, it should be introduced next
year after due consultations with all critical stakeholders, and the public
adequately sensitized.
“For now, all we want is for all the candidates to be allowed to
sit for the post-UTME or we go to court,’’ he said.
Former Chairman, Senior Staff Association of Nigerian
Universities (SSANU), UNILAG Chapter, Mr Joseph Adefolalu said JAMB’s action
was meant to destabilize the present administration.
JAMB’s spokesman Fabian Benjamin, described the parents’
agitation was uncalled for.
According to him, universities are at liberty to go higher than
180, as cut off marks, based on their peculiarities.
He said, whatever cut-off points they were adopting must be
uniformly applied to all candidates.
“I do not see anything wrong with what UNILAG has done.
“This is because a time will come when some universities may
have to peg their cut-off points at 300 marks, based on performance.
“Before we send candidates to the universities, we normally
ensure that we know their carrying capacities; because we do not want a
situation, whereby, they will present more than they can admit.
“There are private universities and other tertiary institutions
that also need candidates, so, we try to distribute evenly,’’ he said.
Benjamin said JAMB, in its magnanimity, posted students that scored 200
and above to private universities, to prevent them from staying at home for
another year.
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