Tag: candidate

  • 28,000 candidates for admission

    Over 28,000 candidates sat for the 2013 Post-Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examinations (UTME) of the Federal University of Agriculture Abeokuta (FUNAAB).

    The three-day screening, which took place in three centres, was hitch-free as adequate arrangements were made for the movement of candidates in and out of the university.

    According to Prof Toyin Arowolo, Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academic) and coordinator of the exercise, about 9,800 candidates sat daily and in batches, adding that over 700 computers and relevant accessories were provided for the electronic tests.

    Arowolo said candidates could not engage in malpractices or hooliganism owing to the tight security in place.

    Parents and guardians of candidates who wrote the Post-UTME commended the exercise. Mr Amoo Kolawole (Lagos) and Mrs Bello Mariam (Sango-Ota), expressed satisfaction over the fleet of luxury buses FUNAAB provided at designated points to convey students to and from campus, as well as provision of tents as shields for parents.

  • Fee hike blues for candidates

    Fee hike blues for candidates

    AT N9,000, the registration fee for the November/December 2013 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) for private candidates (popularly known as GCE) is steep for many. Yet, that is the cost of registration during the regular period stipulated by the West African Examinations Council (WAEC), which ended on July 31. Late registration for the examination, which opened on August 1, and ended on August 20, attracted additional N10,000 penalty, bringing the total cost of registration to N19,000.

    The cost is borne by the parents of some candidates who can afford it. Others save towards buying the access PIN with which to complete the registration online. They can only save if they have jobs, which many do not.

    Sixteen-year old Damilola Akanni is one of the candidates finding it difficult to pay for the exam he lost his father. Year after year, he has been saving towards writing the examination. But he has not been able to achieve his dream because of the pittance he makes from his ‘pure’ water business in Akure, the Ondo State Capital. The registration fee was N6,850 last year.

    “With my Pure Water business, I have been saving some money in order to pay for the form. But with this development, I may need to suspend the plan for now. Since my father’s death, my mother and I have been struggling to care for other children he left behind. Though I dropped out from school few months after he died, my target is to work harder and become great in life. WAEC should change its mind because of people like us,” he said.

    Parents are also not finding it easy raising money for the examination. Those with more than one children planning to take the examination, said they could not sponsor all of them at once.

    Mrs. Bambo Akinloye, a trader in Akure, said she was planning to get the form for two of her children but was forced to pay for only one.

    “It is a difficult task for my own family to eat since my husband lost his job. Sometimes, the children are forced to go to school on empty stomach because we don’t have enough money to care for their needs. Our plan was to get the WAEC form for two of the children. But, with this, there is no way we can cope,” she said.

    Mr Anietie Ibah, another parent residing in Calabar, the Cross River State Capital, said he changed plans to register his daughter, Sarah, for the examination next year because the price was beyond what he had planned for.

    “About N10,000 to register for this exam for my daughter, I don’t have. She would wait a little,” he said.

    Operators of computer coaching centres that assist candidates with registration and preparation for the examination said they recorded low patronage this year because of the fee hike.

    Checks in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State Capital, showed that a centre called, Must Make It Educational Centre in Mgbuoba area of Port Harcourt has closed down for lack of patronage.

    The Success Coaching Centre, a popular centre in Akure, also recorded low patronage this year. When our correspondent visited, the ever-busy centre only had a few candidates.

    Its coordinator, Mr Biodun Badmus, said many parents could not afford the new fees which they complained was outrageous.

    The challenge of raising funds to register for the examination is not new. Even when the registration fee was less than N9,000, many families could not afford it. As a result, some lawmakers in the states and assemblies have been sponsoring candidates for the examination as part of their constituency projects for years.

    Deputy Whip of the Lagos State House of Assembly Hon. Rotimi Abiru said he had been give free forms yearly to candidates in his Somolu II constituency in the last six years. He said no fewer than 400 youths have benefited from the gesture so far. He described the gesture as “another way of empowering indigent but brilliant youths who cannot afford the forms.”

    The lawmaker representing Eti-Osa II Constituency in the Lagos State House of Assembly, Hon. Gbolahan Yishawu, said he had also given free forms to about 300 candidates in the past four years.

    “As representatives of the people we owe it a duty to assist them to enable them acquire the necessary education especially when so many of them are from poor homes whose parents can’t afford the cost of purchasing forms,” he said.

    Hon. Bimbo Daramola, who represents Ekiti North Federal Constituency I in the House of Representatives, also has a similar initiative, which he said is to assist his constituents.

    “As a representative of the people, you must be sufficiently aware of their need and accommodate them as much as you can reasonably afford,” he said.

    Apart from the cost, which was increased from N7,500 last year, some of those interviewed claimed that the registration duration did not favour candidates as it was shorter this year by two months.

    Mr. Obelle O. Obelle, who runs a remedial class in Aba, Abia State, described the short duration as an administrative incompetence of the examination body.

    He wondered why WAEC would want candidates to register for the examination within one month instead of the normal three months.

    He said cost was not a factor for low registration as people still registered for the exam normally.

    He said: “Nov/Dec WASSCE is an exam for people who are already working. The issue of parents not being able to register their children for the exam should be ruled out. It is not SSCE. Any person that wants to write GCE (Nov/Dec WASSCE) must have budgeted for it.

    “What people are crying out for is the time for the registration. But one thing people like doing is registering at the 11th hour. People will never show interest or seriousness until the dying minute.

    “But how can they (WAEC) say that registration that was supposed to last for three months will now last for one month? WAEC knows what they are doing. At my centre, people are still registering and nobody has ever complained about the current N9,300.”

    Badmus also refused to link the poor turn out of students at his centre to the hike in fees.

    “The number of students coming to my centre has been low for sometime now because they now prefer to patronise “Miracle Centres” to pass easily rather than concentrating on their studies. I don’t believe the increase in WAEC fees is the cause of low turnout, but because some of the students paid more than what the WAEC demanded for to their illegal centres. Some paid N50,000 to N100,000,” he said.

    Tony Andoni registers candidates for the examination on the premises of the University of Calabar. According to him, he has not noticed any appreciable difference in the number of students that registered this year as against previous years.

    “The students have just been coming in as usual. I would say they are not as much as last year, but the difference is not so much. The candidates who come to register have however been complaining that the money is so much. The other alternative which is NECO external is about the same price range otherwise I am sure many would have left this one for it. Maybe if they are shifting the closing date it is so that they can make more money,” Andoni said.

    Another operator who registers candidates at the gate of the WAEC office in Calabar, simply called Victor, said he charged N10,500. He also said there was no appreciable drop in the number of candidates.

    Mr Fidelis Atsu takes extramural classes at the Government Secondary School along Atu in Calabar. He said despite the high cost of the examination he has not seen any decline in the number of candidates he is teaching.

    However, the story changed when the late registration window opened, with additional charge of N10, 000, bringing the amount to about N20,000. Andoni said within the late entry period which closed on August 20, he registerd just one candidate.

    Mr Olukayo Akinwunmi, the Director of Guarantee Success Academy in Ado Ekiti, the Ekiti State Capital, said majority of the students who had been attending tutorial classes suddenly stopped because of their inability to meet up with the over 100 per cent penalty attached to late registration.

    He said it was not the first time that people were crying out against such acts and nothing significant was done.

    Cordelia Ngwu , a computer operator who registers candidates in Nnewi, Anambra State, said the extension did not help many to register.

    “I did not register up to five people since the increment. The extension is useless as far as I am concerned because the price is too high. Many students cannot afford it,” she said.

    Mr Bolaji Busola, Director of Higher Ground Tutorial College in Lagos believes the late registration fee is in order.

    “The fee attached to late registration of students for the examination is not outrageous considering the efforts it would involve incorporating them, given the closeness of the examination.”

    It is normal and should be expected. I don’t believe the fee increment is abnormal or condemnable. Those who could not register at the normal charge of N9,500 should expect to pay the additional charge of N10,000, making N19,500.

    “Consider those who just found out that they were unable to make their papers in the last WAEC/GCE results just released. Without that extension, it means they would have to wait a whole year before having an opportunity to write the papers again. So, the extension will serve as a hope to them”, he said.

    Many people fault WAEC for closing the normal registration window before announcing the results of the May/June 2013 WASSCE.

    They said the closure denied many candidates who did not make the requisite number of credits in the examination an opportunity to register for the November/December version because they could not afford the late registration fees.

    Chibuzor Nwogu, who runs a coaching centre in the Sabo Tasha area of Kaduna, said enrolment was poor this year. He said he usually had close to 100 candidates annually in his centre for extra lessons. But this year, he did not register more than five because of the short registration period.

    “Usually, WAEC allows a time frame of at least one week from the day when they release the result for internal exams so that candidates who did not make it will register. But, this year, they increased the fees even before the release of the result for the internal exams and now candidates are required to pay as much as N19,300 to register for the exam.

    “You will agree with me that people don’t have that kind of money to spend at this time; and so, it has affected the registration and has also affected us. I can tell you that at the moment, I am running my centre at a loss because we have to keep the place going even though the number of students is not encouraging,” he said.

    The limitation in the number of centres where the exam is to be taken may also have reduced interest in it by students. It was gathered that centres in private schools were eliminated from the list this year by the council which approved only government schools. One coaching centre operator, who refused to give his name, said: “You can’t believe that there are only four centres in Kaduna South and they are all government schools. In the past, we have centres in private schools and, in most cases, these centres attract more candidates. But this time around, there are no such centres; so students are reluctant to come and register.”

    Responding to claims that WAEC did not give enough time for normal registration, the Head of the Public Affairs Section, Nigerian National office, Mr Yusuf Ari, said candidates were given four months to register. He also said the examination is not more expensive than other public examinations.

    He said: “The registration period commenced about five months ago. The last extension of the registration period ended on August 20. When you compare what WAEC charges for its exams with what other examining bodies charge, you will see that what WAEC charges is very reasonable indeed.”

  • Group rejects Mark’s endorsement of candidate

    A group, the Coalition of Youths across Political Parties in Benue State, has rejected an alleged endorsement of a lawmaker, Hassan Saleh, by Senate President David Mark, to run for re-election to represent the Ado, Ogbadibo and Okpokwu Federal Constituency in the House of Representatives.

    It said the manner the endorsement was carried out was not only undemocratic, but also anti-people.

    The group noted that critical stakeholders, who have invested and nurtured the Idoma political space for decades, were not carried along.

    A statement by the group’s President Thomas Oduh and Secretary Pascal Unogwu condemned and rejected the endorsement, if it ever happened.

    “SenatorDavid Mark and Mr. Abba Morro’s endorsement of Hassan Saleh in Otukpo, which is outside our federal constituency, is not only a slap but also an insult on the good people of Ado, Okpokwu and Ogbadibo.

    “The purported endorsement does not have the blessing of our people, the constituency Hassan Saleh represents or intends to represent further in 2015.

    “Democracy is not like military dictatorship, and our leaders must learn this fast by embarking on wide consultations before making any move that touches the politics of a people.

    “Saleh should know by now that majority of the people of his federal constituency are courageous and honorable and will abide by the agreement reached in 2010… that beginning from 2011, the seat of House of Representatives would be rotational among the three local governments on a single term basis…”

     

     

     

     

  • I’ll back APC candidate if not picked, says Buhari

    I’ll back APC candidate if not picked, says Buhari

    Former Head of State Maj.-Gen. Muhammadu Buhari (rtd) spoke yesterday on his political future.

    He said he would support whoever emerges as the presidential candidate of the All Progressive Congress (APC) to challenge the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the 2015 election.

    Gen. Buhari, the leader of the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC), who expressed optimism that the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) would register the new party, which the CPC, the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) and the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) are championing, spoke in a Liberty Radio interview monitored in Kaduna.

    The three-time presidential candidate also fielded questions on a wide range of issues, among which are the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF) election crisis and the Boko Haram insurrection.

    Gen. Buhari, who has been touted as a hardliner in his quest for the emerging party’s ticket, said: “If APC fails to give me the ticket, I will remain in partisan politics and in the party. Anyone the party picks as its candidate, I will support because I will remain in the APC.”

    “The guest of the week” first spoke in Hausa before speaking in English. He said the promoters of the APC were aware of the challenges ahead of them in an effort to register the party, adding that “the road to merger is quite rough”.

    “The ruling party, with its enormous resources and its capacity for coercion, has seen it as a threat and they have said it. Personally, I came to realise since 2007 that Nigerians believe that the only way to stabilise the system of multi-party democracy is for the opposition parties that have representatives right from councillors to the National Assembly to come together to deliver their constituencies democratically. This is the only way you can counter PDP’s enormous physical and material influence in the country.”

    Gen. Buhari expressed optimism that the APC will be registered. He said: “By nature, I am an optimist. If I were not an optimist, I would not attempt to contest the presidency three times and end up in the Supreme Court three times. I believe we are going to be registered.

    “There is a law guiding registration (of parties), which states that you must have your headquarters in the nation’s capital that can be identified by INEC and you must have a convention. All the three parties involved have held their conventions and have agreed to forsake their existing parties and go for APC.

    “At the national level, we must have those who will run the party. As soon as we meet these criteria and INEC acknowledges that, 30 days after the acknowledgement, we are APC, whether INEC writes to us and to give us the registration or not”.

    Gen. Buhari accused politicians from the Niger Delta of encouraging the insecurity in the country by recruiting and arming youths in their desperate attempt to retain power as governors.

    The former Nigerian leader said unlike the special treatment given to the Niger Delta militants by the Federal Government, the Boko Haram members were being killed and their houses demolished by government.

    While accusing President Jonathan of failing from the beginning to address the security situation in the country, Buhari said he had never supported the state of emergency declared by the President on May 15 on Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states.

    He said: “What is responsible for the security situation in the country is caused by the activities of Niger Delta militants. Every Nigerian that is familiar with what is happening knows this. The Niger Delta militants started it all.

    “What happened is that the governors of the Niger Delta region at that time wanted to win their elections. So, they recruited the youths and gave them guns and bullets. They used them against their opponents to win the elections by force.

    “After the elections were over, they asked the boys to return the guns; the boys refused to return the guns. Because of that, the allowance that was being given to the youths by the governors during that time was stopped.

    “The youths resorted to kidnapping oil workers and were collecting dollars as ransom. Now a boy of 18 to 20 years was getting about 500 dollars in a week, why will he go to school and spend 20 years to study and then come back and get employed by government to be paid N100,000 a month, that is if he is lucky to get employment.

    “So kidnapping became very rampant in the Southsouth and the Southeast. They kidnapped people and were collecting money.

    “How did Boko Haram start? We know that their leader, Mohammed Yusuf started his militancy and the police couldn’t control them. The army was invited. He was arrested by soldiers and handed over to the police.

    “The appropriate thing to do, according to the law, was for the police to carry out investigations and charge him to court for prosecution, but they killed him. His in-law was killed; they went and demolished their houses. Because of that, his supporters resorted to what they are doing today.

    In the case of the Niger Delta militants, Gen. Buhari said the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua sent an aeroplane to bring them. He sat down with them and discussed with them. He added that the militants were cajoled, given money and granted amnesty.

    “They were trained in some skills and were given employment, but the ones in the North were being killed and their houses were being demolished. They are different issues. What brought this? It is injustice,” he said.

    Speaking on the controversy surrounding the election of the NGF chairman, Gen. Buhari said since the forum was not a legal body; he saw no reason for the controversy. “The confusion is unfortunate,” he said adding:

    “To me, the Governors forum is not constitutional and it is not a party affair because they are supposed to come from all the parties. There is no constitutional law as far as I can see. So,why all these row about it.

    “I watched the clip of the election which seems to have been conducted in a free and fair way. But then, Jang came and said he won the election when we saw visibly on the screen how they conducted the election.

    “The man who presided over the election declared the result there and then. I was surprised how Jang came to say he won the election and proceeded to open his own secretariat.

    “So, if 36 of them can not conduct an election, Nigerians should begin to appreciate what we are in for when they are supposed to be conducting an election for over 140 million people by 2015.”

  • Brawl in Govt House over candidate

    The Peregrino Hall of the Cross River State Governor’s Lodge was the scene of a brawl over who emerged the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chairmanship candidate in Obubra Local Government.

    A source said some politicians could not come to terms on who to select as the PDP candidate.

    According to the source, Governor Liyel Imoke, who was overseeing the process, asked the stakeholders to step outside to choose from the three persons presented-Dr Kerian Nfam, Egbe Jabengo and Cyprian Ayu.

    He said while they were discussing, they still could not agree and tempers rose causing one of them to slap another, leading to a free- for-all fight.

    “When the fight was going on, the governor came out of the hall to watch in amazement.

    “We started the meeting at about 8 pm and we were there until one 1am and no side was willing to defer to the other and when the fight broke out the governor came out to watch from the balcony in amazement – there was disappointment on his face.

    “The fight ended the meeting in a stalemate with the caucus members leaving at about 2am on Sunday.”

     

  • We shall support Orji’s candidate, says Ngwa politicians

    A group of Ngwa politicians, led by Rt. Hon. Christopher Enweremadu, has thrown their weight behind an Ukwa-Ngwa gubernatorial candidate nominated by Governor Theodore Orji as his successor come 2015 general election.

    The group made their position known in Aba after a courtesy visit to the Oha Ngwa Traditional Rulers Council (an umbrella body of traditional rulers in Ngwaland).

    According to Enweremadu, “Today, we took advantage of the periodic meeting of traditional rulers in Ngwaland under the auspices of Oha Ngwa Traditional Rulers Council, to update them on the current political developments in our area as it affects some of us.

    “One being that we see the need for the Ngwa man to continue to support the present administration in the state, led by Theodore Orji. We see that as a way to pay back for so many good things he has done in this state. It is only a man that is alive that can begin to enjoy the pleasures of life. The numerous achievements of this state under Orji cannot be overemphasised. And we are also grateful that we are not the only ones that have acknowledged the importance of security in the state.”

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • 2015: Jonathan can’t be PDP’s sole candidate, says Atiku

    2015: Jonathan can’t be PDP’s sole candidate, says Atiku

    •Ex-VP vows to resist party’s  likely constitution change

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has vowed to resist any attempt to foist President Goodluck Jonathan on the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) as the sole candidate in 2015.

    Atiku, who has declared his intention to seek the PDP ticket ahead of the 2015 polls, spoke in Kano yesterday. He was reacting to alleged surreptitious moves to amend the PDP Constitution to pave the way for Jonathan’s sole candidacy.

    Elder statesman and Ijaw leader Chief Edwin Clark, in a letter to Niger State Governor Babangida,Aliyu, which he read to reporters in Abuja last week, said there was nothing wrong with a Jonathan sole candidacy.

    He said the practice in democratic presidential system of government is that “an incumbent President remains the sole candidate of a political party at the party’s convention, if he or she is willing to contest for a second term in office”.

    The former minister said it was the practice in the United States from where Nigeria copied its presidential system for the incumbent President to automatically get his party’s ticket.

    He wondered whether the late President Umaru Yar’Adua would not have sought a second term in office if he were to be alive.

    Clark said: “To lend credence to the fact that a sitting President is entitled to a second term, the ambitious and unpatriotic governors and some northern conservative politicians confirmed this constitutional provision by saying that it was the second term of the late President Umaru Yar’Adua that the North wanted to complete in 2011.

    “In other words, the late President was entitled to eight years in office but Jonathan is entitled to only a single term, contrary to the 1999 Constitution.”

    Atiku said: “My position is that as far as PDP Constitution is concerned, any attempt to change the party’s rule to favour the President as a sole candidate in the event of his willingness to re-contest is unconstitutional. The contest should be open to all with the desire to pursue an ambition on the platform of the PDP.

    “I don’t think any such amendment of the party constitution will be successful; we are looking forward to a successful transition in 2015.”

    Atiku also picked hole in the statement credited to a Commissioner of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) that there would be no election in the North in 2015 due to the security challenges being experienced in the region.

    To him, such are uncalled for.

    “For me, that is a wrong statement to come from any such office because as far as I am concerned, the entire North is peaceful, except for two states. How can you now say there may not be election in the North with 19 states, just because there is problem in two states.

    “We don’t know the man who made the statement is working for; he certainly is not reflecting INEC’s position. It is an inaccurate statement, that we will not go for election in the North.”

    On the allegation that INEC and the PDP are working to thwart the All Progressive Congress (APC) registration, Atiku said the allegation was unsubstantiated. He said he conducted a private investigation, which confirmed that the PDP is not behind the registration crisis.

     

  • Why I’m at the  Tribunal, Ondo  Accord candidate

    Why I’m at the Tribunal, Ondo Accord candidate

    The candidate of the Accord in the October 20 governorship election in Ondo State, Mr. James Ojo, has said he filed a petition at Election Petition Tribunal because he was “unlawfully excluded from the election by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    He is praying the Tribunal to nullify the election and order the conduct of a fresh one.

    Ojo said this would enable his “numerous supporters and party members” cast their votes for him.

    He said he emerged his party’s standard bearer after a peaceful primary that was witnessed by INEC officials.

    Ojo said despite the court action he instituted at the Federal High Court to compel INEC to include his name on the list of governorship candidates, the electoral body refused to do so.

    INEC, the Labour Party (LP) and Governor Olusegun Mimiko are joined as respondents.

    The Nation learnt that Ojo is being lobbied by “powerful forces” to withdraw his petition, but Ojo has insisted that he should not have been excluded from the election.