Wednesday, 19 April 2017

JAMB: ASUU faults registration logjam, asks Oloyede to step aside




Chairman, Academic Staff Union of Universities, (ASUU) University of Ibadan Chapter, Dr. Deji Omole has asked the Registrar of Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) Professor Ishaq Oloyede to voluntarily resign his position for the lopsided nature of the ongoing JAMB registration coordinated by the Board.

Omole noted that the registration problems being experienced by candidates are major set-back and may jeopardize the ambition of candidates who are interested higher education.

The don who made this known while speaking with journalists on Wednesday in Ibadan, then called on the Minister of Education, Malam Adamu Adamu to call the Registrar to order not to make life difficult for the children of the masses who yearn for quality public education.


Omole while speaking on the heels of the cumbersome registration procedure introduced by the JAMB registrar which he said has succeeded in wasting time the candidates are supposed to be using to read at what he called fraudulent registration centers.

He reiterated the call of the union for the scrapping of the examination body, added that universities must be allowed to design its standard examination for its own candidates.

While stating that the performances of the the JAMB registrar since assumption of office has further confirmed the position of the union that JAMB has outlived its usefulness, urging the Federal government to do the needful in order to save public education.

Omole further alleged that the Registrar connived with private universities by reducing the number of public universities candidates can choose to one instead of two.


He also faulted the one-month registration as against the usual three-month window coupled with the cumbersome registration challenges, describing the policy as inhuman and insensitive to the yearnings of Nigerian students.

The ASUU boss further noted that the fact that a mock examination was stopped due to logistic reasons underscores the point of the incompetence of the Registrar, noting that if candidates could not do mock, how sure are they to pass the examination.

“Why will anybody make life difficult for candidates whose parents are struggling to live under the terrible condition the government has made them to live in? Why would somebody introduce changes that is only known by members of the board?

”We have made a case for the scrapping of this body because in the present instance, the introduction of different registration procedure has turned candidates to victims of fraud while different centers now make business by arranging with private schools who bring all their students in group to come and register while children of the masses look on.


”This is a failed approach to change and the Registrar admitted this with the cancellation of the mock examination. How can we ensure that the candidates prepare well for the exams when they spend weeks waiting for PIN and are at the mercy of registration officers who force them to go to cybercafe where they have arrangements to first create their profile before they can have their PIN?

”This is where people are duping the Nigerian children. This is a total failure. Students must have at least three months for registration, its procedure must be open and their options to public universities must not be limited to serve the agenda of the proprietors of private universities.”

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