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NIN to check exam malpractice, JAMB registrar explains

By Sodiq Omolaoye, Abuja
27 March 2021   |   4:03 am
The Registrar, Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB), Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, has said the board introduced the use of National Identity Number (NIN) for the registration of the 2021 Unified...

Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, JAMB Registrar

The Registrar, Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB), Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, has said the board introduced the use of National Identity Number (NIN) for the registration of the 2021 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) to checkmate examination malpractices.

Oloyede, who spoke in Abuja yesterday during a virtual meeting with owners of Computer Based Test Centres, service providers and other stakeholders to kick-start the 2021 UTME registration, also warned that no CBT was allowed to register candidates for NIN, adding that any centre found to engage in such act would be sanctioned.

He explained that the directive for the use of NIN as a prerequisite for registration was from the Minister of Education, saying the motive was also for security reasons.

“We don’t even require the name of the candidate; we just want the NIN. We will then do the needful to pull the data of the candidate and the process will go on from there.

“It’s for security reasons; for us at our small level it helps us to avoid impersonation but there is a bigger picture of insecurity in the country and we know that many of this problems we have is because we have identification problem. We cannot identify every citizen, where he is and what he is doing.

“Government is trying to ensure that we have some strategy for improving the security system and of course if those who are coming into the tertiary institutions are exposed to this basic civic responsibility, it will be good to develop a culture of accountability because accountability starts from being identified,” Oloyode explained.

The JAMB registrar, who noted that candidates must make use of accessible SIM cards which has never been used for UTME registration, said talks were ongoing with the Minister of Communication and Digital Economy to grant a conditioned waiver to an estimated 20 per cent of candidates without a SIM card.

“We have told the National Communication Commission (NCC), approached the Minister of Communication and Digital Economy and we are hopeful that we will be granted waiver with of course, conditionalities, which we must ensure the candidates meet.

“Not all the candidates are without SIM; 80 per cent of the candidates already have their number. We are talking of the 20 per cent and if we are fortunate enough to secure the waiver of the minister through the NCC, we will go ahead to make sure there is full compliance with the conditionalities because it is in our interest as a nation that those things that are put in place should be allowed to protect all of us.”

While cautioning owners of CBT centres against examination malpractice, the JAMB Registrar said all centres owned by the same person or persons caught in the moral act would be suspended.

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