The Joint Admission and Matriculation Board, JAMB has announced the
adoption of a policy whereby candidates of universities with surplus
applicants for the Unified Matriculation Examinations (UTME) are
reassigned to other universities with lower number of candidates than
their capacities.
The decision for the new policy was taking during its 2015 Combined Policy Meeting, held on July 14, in Abuja.
Following this development, the National Association of Nigerian
Students (NANS), Southwest Zone D has kicked against the new policy,
alleging that it was fraudulent.
In a statement by the General Secretary, NANS Zone D, Obanobi Bidemi,
the apex students’ body said: “The eligibility regulation of the Joint
Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has been brought to the notice of the NANS. It is lame and nonsensical.
“Over 40 million Nigerian students at home and in diaspora want the
JAMB registrar to define the word ‘choice of institution.’ Why would I
be posted to a school I never applied for? We saw this trend coming from
last year when the board reduced the options of institution of
choice from six to three, claiming it is to save students from the
fraudulent activities of tertiary institutions in the process of
admitting students.
“We call on the Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission (EFCC) to begin a probe into the accounts of the admission
board, its registrar and top echeleon, as it has been paid by
proprietors of private tertiary institutions hence the bastardization
of the admission exercise, a great semblance to the scandal that rocked the world football governing body, FIFA.
“Nigerian students pass a vote of no confidence in the JAMB registrar
and hereby call for his immediate sack,” adding that “over 5 million
students across the six states of the Southwest including affected
students will be mobilized to the office of JAMB, if this policy is
not reversed immediately.”
Meanwhile, JAMB registrar, Professor Dibu Ojerinde, who explained the
benefit of the new policy said: “The policy will help needy
universities with lower number of candidates than their capacities have more candidates to admit.
“It will assist JAMB candidates have better chances for admission in
the universities they are re-assigned to, contrary to situations where
they would await admission in the universities of their first choices
until the admission exercise closes. They usually end up forfeiting
admission in that session.”
Consequently, the eligibility for Post-UTME screening in Nigerian
universities has been determined by JAMB, as only candidates whose
names were forwarded to each university by the apex exam body will be eligible for the post-UTME screening.
The board, however, urged candidates re-check on its website to know the universities they have been re-assigned to.

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