Hundreds of candidates wishing to sit
for Monday’sUnified Tertiary Matriculation Examination escaped death in
Jos after they were
fired at by policemen called to maintain law and
order.
This happened on Wednesday after they
went berserk following the inability of the authorities to release
examination slips to them.
The candidates had gathered at the
Murtala Mohammed Way office of the Joint Admission and Matriculation
Board following announcements that they should come for the details of
their examination centres.
One of our correspondents gathered that
the candidates were asked by JAMB officials to leave their slips and
come back later to collect their details.
However, the authorities were overwhelmed by the sheer number of students who had converged on the office.
The candidates were said to have become restive when the staff of JAMB were very slow in releasing the slips to them.
In the confusion that ensued, the
officials closed their offices and asked the candidates to come back the
next day. At this juncture, they became enraged and started smashing
doors and windows of the offices.
The policemen were said to have fired gunshots in the air to disperse the candidates.
One of the candidates, who identified
herself as Kemi, expressed dismay at the development, saying that the
officials were endangering their lives. She said JAMB had chosen its
office as the only centre to get the information instead of
decentralising to other business centres.
She said many students would have been knocked down by motorists fleeing from the gunshots.
She said, “The huge number of candidates
at the office was enough to attract any suicide bomber and in the event
of any such incident, the casualties would be monumental.”
The Police Public Relations Officer, DSP
Emmanuel Abuh, told one of our correspondents that the police were
called to maintain law and order after the candidates became riotous.
He said, “The police only dispersed them
because they constituted a great danger to motorists because the office
is located at a major highway.”
Also, pandemonium engulfed the office of
JAMB in Lokoja, the Kogi State capital and the College of Education,
Ilorin, the Kwara State capital, as a result of protests by the
candidates and students respectively.
While scores of candidates in Lokoja
protested against the alleged plan by JAMB workers to cheat them by
demanding extra charges than the stipulated fees, the students in Ilorin
on Wednesday made attempts to disrupt examinations being taken by their
colleagues.
Our correspondent gathered that some
people had accused some workers in JAMB office in Lokoja of demanding
more than the prescribed fees.
It was gathered on Wednesday that the
aggrieved candidates stormed JAMB office in Phase 2 Lokoja and engaged
the JAMB officials in a free for all which led to the collapse of the
entrance gate.
One of the candidates, who spoke to
journalists in Lokoja on condition of anonymity, said during the time
they were purchasing the forms, JAMB officials allegedly demanded extra
fee of N700.
He said, “Ordinarily we can do the
registration online from any internet-based platform, but because they
wanted to extort that N700 from each of the candidates, they gave the
order.
“When it was time to check for our
centres and get the print outs for Saturday computer-based test, they
asked us to pay the money.”
The state JAMB Coordinator, Mr. Daniel
Agbo, was said to have sought the assistance of officials of the
Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps to bring the situation under
control.
When PUNCH Metro visited JAMB office, a lady, who declined to disclose her name, but said she was a JAMB worker, said Agbo was not in office.
In Ilorin, the rampaging students
disrupted the examinations being taken by their colleagues and other
academic activities. They also obstructed the free flow of traffic on
Ilorin General Hospital to Saw Mill Road.
Some of the students, who spoke with
journalists in Ilorin, but declined to mention their names, said they
embarked on the protest because some students were ejected from the
examination hall for not paying certain levy of N4,500 called, “Course
form fee”.
They further alleged that the protest
was triggered off when some of them who had paid their schools fees were
sent out of examination hall for not paying the course form levy.
But the Rector of the college, Dr.
Isiaka Opobiyi, said the protesters had not paid their school fees and
attempted to prevent those who had paid from taking their examinations.
He said, “The members of the school management are managing the situation.”
Source:Punch Newspaper.
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