Tag: WAEC

  • JUST IN: WAEC to decide on withheld results today

    JUST IN: WAEC to decide on withheld results today

    The West African Examinations Council (WAEC) will today decide on the cases of malpractice and irregularities that arose during the conduct of the 2023 West African Senior School Certificate Examinations, WASSCE.

    The examination body, while announcing this on its X handle on Tuesday, said the 76th meeting of the Nigeria Examinations Committee will be holding to deliberate on cases of malpractice and irregularities arising from the 2023 West African Senior School Certificate Examination for school candidates.

    Read Also: JUST IN: WAEC to decide on withheld results today

    The Nation reported on Monday that WAEC appointed Dr. Amos Josiah Dangut as the Head of the Nigeria National Office.

    In August, the examination body initially released the 2023 WASSCE results, but the outcomes of 262,803 candidates were put on hold due to instances of examination malpractice.

    The post reads: “The 76th Meeting of the Nigeria Examinations Committee (NEC) to consider & decide on the malpractice/irregularity cases arising from the conduct of WASSCE for School Candidates, 2023 begins today.”

  • JUST IN: WAEC gets new Head of National Office

    JUST IN: WAEC gets new Head of National Office

    The West African Examinations Council (WAEC) has appointed Dr Amos Josiah Dangut as the Head of the Nigeria National Office. Prior to his appointment, he was the Deputy Registrar HNO’s Office. 

    He succeeds Patrick Ehidiamen Areghan,whose tenure ended October 1.

    This was contained in a statement by Acting Head of Public Affairs, Moyosola Adesina.

    Dangut was born on October 2, 1967, in Mbar District of Bokkos Local Government Area of Plateau State. 

    He attended Government Secondary School, Riyom (1981 to 1983) and Government Science School, Kuru (1983 to 1986), where he obtained his WASC/SC in 1986), both in Plateau State; from there, he proceeded to the University of Agriculture, Makurdi, Benue State, where he bagged Bachelor of Agriculture in Animal Production in 1991.

    He got  Master of Science in Animal Science in April 1994  at the University of Ibadan while he did his PhD in Animal Science in  2017 at Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University, Bauchi. He got another  Master of Education (Administration and Planning) in 2020 from the National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN). 

    Dangut  joined  WAEC in 1998 as an Assistant Registrar (AR) II. He rose through the ranks to become a Deputy Registrar in April 2018. He won the Nigeria Examinations Committee’s (NEC) commendation for transparent conduct of examination between 2000 and 2006.

    Read Also: WAEC to introduce CBT for WASSCE — HNO

    He served as an Assistant Registrar/Subject Officer, Test Development Division, WAEC, Lagos (July, 1998 – January, 2005); Senior Assistant Registrar/Head of Examinations Security and Deputy to the Branch Controller, Uyo Branch Office (January, 2005 – January, 2008); Senior Assistant Registrar/Head of Examinations Security and Deputy to the Branch Controller, Bauchi Branch Office (January, 2008 – December, 2011); Senior Assistant Registrar/Branch Controller, Yola Branch office (December, 2011 – January, 2019); Deputy Registrar/Controller, Post Examinations Department (January, 2019 – October, 2020); Deputy Registrar/Zonal Coordinator, Ikeja Zonal Office.

    Dangut has various educational publications in international and national journals. He has also presented numerous keynotes and other papers at international and national conferences. He is an active member of the Science Teachers Association of Nigeria (STAN) and the Nigeria Institute of Management (NIM).

  • WAEC to introduce CBT for WASSCE — HNO

    WAEC to introduce CBT for WASSCE — HNO

    The West African Examinations Council (WAEC) says plans to introduce the Computer Based Test (CBT) mode in the administration of its examinations are at advanced stage.

    The Head of National Office (HNO), Mr Patrick Areghan, gave the hint in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Saturday in Lagos.

    Areghan was speaking against the backdrop of notable achievements and advancements of the council under his watch, as he prepared to bow out of office on Oct. 1.

    He would be bowing out after completing his three-year tenure.

    Areghan said that introducing the CBT mode of administrating some of the council’s examination had been part of his vision for the body in the near future.

    ”We have already started something in terms of CBT examination. We have gone far with our planning and all of that, even in the sub region, the registrar to council is also doing something.

    “But this is not as easy as some people will think. This is because we ask ourselves, how do we conduct CBT for practicals and essay papers?

    “We can only readily do that in the case of objective questions. But so many people will not see it from that angle. They argue that some others are doing it, why can’t WAEC do same.

    “Now, no one even talks about energy;  how many schools are exposed to computer literacy? How many have computer facilities and how many have electricity to run these things?

    “Even where you have all these things on ground, how do you handle the issue of theory and practical papers? So, these are the issues, but that is what I want the council to do in the very near future.

    “We should be able to conduct CBT examinations, even if it means starting with the objective questions,” he said.

    The outgoing WAEC boss noted that already, the council had concluded on introducing the administration of its examination using the CBT platform under his watch, in no distant time, starting with the objective questions  and later theory and practicals.

     “But you can still be sure that not all schools will be ready. Maybe we can have a segregated market. Those who cannot afford the CBT will go for the pencil and paper mode.

    “So, I will like to see WAEC in that light,” he said.

    Areghan said asides the introduction of the  CBT,  he would also like to see all  the operations of the council fully digitalised in the near future.

    He noted that almost every section of the council had been digitalised under his watch.

    “I have almost digitalised everywhere now. Talk of certificate, checking of results and verification of results and more.

    “I will live to see more massive deployment of technology so that the vision of council can change from just being a world class examination body to a technology-driven examination body.

    “I also want WAEC to be more visible in the international stage. I want to see, through the cooperation of the sub region, how we can take WAEC overseas,  that is, how Nigerian children in the diaspora can sit for WASSCE overseas.

    “That, again, is what I want WAEC to do in the very near future. That is one thing I wanted to do under my watch, but, again like I said, it needs the cooperation of the sub region, not just Nigeria, to take WASSCE overseas.

    “I also want to see its digital certificate that we have successfully launched in Nigeria replicated in the entire sub region, so that any candidate that has taken WASSCE,  can be in any part of the world to access the  digital certificate; that is a legacy.

    “For instance, if your certificate gets missing, soaked, destroyed by fire and so on, with one touch on the bottom, it appears.

    “For me, this is a great legacy,” the WAEC boss stated.

    He also stated that the council’s Digital Security Printing Press is another milestone achievement under his watch.

    According to him, after 71 years of council’s existence  the introduction of the digital security printing press is a worthy legacy.

    Read Also: WAEC results can’t be forged, says HNO

    This is alongside other internal ones, such as the Staff Bus scheme, meant to cushion the effect of high transportation fare, occasioned by the fuel subsidy removal, he said.

    “We are going to do more to motivate staff. I am counting on my successor to follow suit, being a very committed and intelligent person. It is my prayer that he achieves more than me,” he stated.

    Speaking on his greatest achievement, Areghan highlighted the successful conduct of examinations, release of results within stipulated time and printing and release of certificates to deserving candidates as key.

    “That is my greatest achievement. That is because when you work in the council and you fail to conduct any examination, no matter the other levels of achievements, you have failed.

    “So, I give God all the glory that I have been able to conduct all the examinations, even in the COVID-19 years, from 2020 to 2023,” the outgoing council boss told NAN.

    (NAN)

  • Guber 2023: ADC campaign reacts as Kogi declares free education, WAEC fees

    Guber 2023: ADC campaign reacts as Kogi declares free education, WAEC fees

    The campaign team of  the governorship candidate of the African Democratic Congress (ADC) for the November 11 election in Kogi State, Hon Leke Abejide, has mocked the All Progressives Congress (APC) led  government of Yahaya Bello. Bello’s government recently declared free education for primary and secondary schools pupils in the State. 

    This includes offsetting WAEC fees for SSS 3 students starting next academic session.

    The Abejide team described the move as ” mere political palliative” and “an afterthought”, coming in the eighth year of Bello’s ruinous administration which has inflicted untold pain and hardship on the people of the state. 

    The ADC reminded Bello that as a private citizen and public officer in the last five years, its governorship candidate, Abejide has dutifully sustained the payment of WAEC fees of all SSS 3 students, both public and private colleges in parts of the state.

    Abejide also intends to extend the conscientious goodwill beyond Yagba federal constituency and Okunland to the 21 local government areas of the state, beginning from October 2023. 

    The ADC maintained that Abejide was not a candidate for any office but a public-spirited patriot when he flagged off the scheme in his immediate federal constituency in 2018.

    Kogi Commissioner For Education, Science, and Technology, Mr Wemi Jones at a public function last Thursday in Lokoja, Kogi State capital hinted as part of the “Education Intervention Programme of Kogi State 2023”, the state government has declared free education at public primary and secondary schools in the state beginning from the next academic session which commences this month of September. 

    According to the education commissioner, the free education policy of the state government encompasses the payment of examination fees for pupils sitting for their First School Leaving Certificate Examination, (FSLCE); the Junior West African Examination Council,  (JWAEC) test and the Senior Secondary School Certificate Examination, (SSSCE). According to the commissioner, the goodwill of the Bello administration will also offset the bills of the National Examination Commission, (NECO) test and the cost of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board, (JAMB) examinations.

    Read Also: Kogi guber: APC remains only option, Ganduje tells Kogites

    He said the state government under the leadership of Governor Yahaya Bello has since its assumption of office made education top priority. According to him 30 percent of the state’s annual budgetary allocation goes to the sector. He added that the plan to pay the examination fee for all public school students starting next session is part of efforts to sustain education as the top priority among the eight thematic areas of the present administration.

    In his reaction, spokesman of the ADC-Abejide Campaign Organisation, Comrade Shola Adebola, noted that Abejide’s headlong participation in the November gubernatorial poll has unsettled the APC. He described as “impulsive and patronizing the APC’s sudden awakening from years of deep slumber, inertia and underwhelming performance to attempt to insult the people of Kogi State with a last-minute Greek gift.”

    According to Adebola: “If they get round to fulfilling their impromptu pledge, it will be to the credit of Hon Leke Abejide who pioneered this years ago in the first place. He it is who has thrown Yahaya Bello and his team on high jump.”

    Speaking further, Adebola said the APC structure in Kogi State must bury it’s head in shame if it had to be knee-jerked by a private individual who has demonstrated capacity, truthfulness and commitment to reach out to students across the whole state.

     “The fundamental theorem is that whatever Bello’s government is doing as palliatives in any sector is a valedictory largesse to the people for enduring eight years of untold humiliation and dehumanisation under Bello’s watch,” Adebola said: “Under Bello, Directors on GL 17 were being paid as little as N20,000 per month as take-home pay. They were expected to pay their rents, feed their families, maintain their vehicles, pay school fees for their wards. All of a sudden, they are being ambushed in a most patronising manner by the Bello government.

    Yahaya Bello is not on the Ballot and as such whatever the government is doing now is reclaiming the lost responsibilities or opportunities and performance of obligation. It has nothing to do with the candidature of APC who has been an architect of the inability of Bello’s government to perform as state  auditor general for local governments.”

    The statement added that “A carnivorous animal (lion) eating meat, cannot turn to herbivorous (cow) eating grasses, overnight. The fundamental principle is giving to Ceaser what belongs to Ceaser. No government paid for my WAEC or JAMB because my father was adequately paid to perform his parental rights. You cannot leave leprosy and proffer medication for eczema, which is not the laboratory diagnosis and believe the ailments would go. A program that was not factored into the Budget from January 30th but now dished out as political palliative is an afterthought of political abracadabra. This cannot survive the test of time.

    “To set the record straight, in 2018, Abejide in his private capacity offered to foot the SSSCE bills of all the students in all government-owned secondary schools in the Yagba catchment. It was an unheralded precedent. Kogi State Government, at the time, never conceived of, nor implemented any such human resource development schemes. 

    “By this singular stroke, Abejide won over not just the admiration of the benefitting youngsters, but he equally touched the hearts of their parents who have been saved the shame of obvious incapacity to see their children and wards through a most critical phase of their academic development. In five years, this feat has been sustained covering both public and private colleges. It was extended to Kabba-Bunu-Ijumu federal constituency in the last academic session with a view to extending the gesture to cover the entire state in October 2023”.

  • Sokoto releases N300m for WAEC, NECO exams fees

    NOT less than N300 million has been approved for payment of Sokoto State pupils who sat for the Senior School Certificate Examination (SSCE) conducted by the West African Examinations Council (WAEC) and National Examination Council (NECO).

    In a statementd by the Public Relations Officer, Sokoto State Ministry for Basic and Secondary Education, Nura Bello Maikwanci, Governor Aminu Waziri Tambuwal noted that the essence of the payment was to ensure prompt release of the results of its indigenes.

    The sum covered part of the cost of the 2018/2019 examinations for both bodies.

    “The  amount is meant for the payment of examinations fees for students who sat for the two examinations as it is expected that with this development the results of the students would soon be released”, the release stated.

    The government urged parents and candidates to exercise more patience, adding that” Sokoto State government is doing everything possible to ensure the release of their results in good time’’.

  • Three teachers, student held for alleged exam malpractice

    The police, in collaboration with West African Examination Council (WAEC), have arrested three teachers and a student for alleged examination malpractice.

    The police said the arrest was carried out by the cybercrime unit of the Force in collaboration with WAEC.

    The suspects are: Ihuokanma Darlington, 36; Ernest Kelechi, 33; Godstime Onuoha, 35 and Uche Chukwuma.

    Darlington, a Political Science graduate of Anambra State University, teaches at Okon Grammar School in Anambra State.

    Kelechi, who is a graduate of Physics from Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Akwa, teaches at Community Secondary School, Ogah, while Onuoha is Head of Department (HOD) Mechanical Engineering graduate from Federal Polytechnic, Nekede. He teaches at Pathway Secondary School in Ngor Okpala, Imo State.

    Chukwuma is a student at Charry Secondary School in Rivers State.

    They were arrested in Imo, Anambra and Rivers states.

    The police said the suspects were involved in the transmission of examination questions and answers of the West African Senior Certificate Examination (WASSCE) through the social media.

    Speaking on Thursday at the parade of the suspects at the Force Headquarters in Abuja, the nation’s capital, Force spokesman Frank Mba, a Deputy Commissioner of Police (DCP), said they were found to have snapped pictures of the examination questions and their solutions on the social media.

    Read Also: Lagos campaigns against exam malpractice

    Condemning their actions, Mba said: “It is a social ill that the police are working collaboratively with relevant agencies to tackle.

    “The Nigeria Police Force has in its custody four male suspects who were arrested and investigated for the roles they played in directly facilitating examination malpractice in the just-concluded WAEC.

    “Paradoxically, of these four suspects, three are teachers. We find this very disturbing because teachers are supposed to help in nurturing the students and be the custodians of the highest level of ethics in our educational system.

    “They are supposed to protect and strengthen the integrity of the system and play leading roles at ensuring that persons who are issued with certificates are deserving of the honours that go with the certificates.

    “The suspects committed the offence using their phones. This highlights some of the challenges associated with the growing use of the social media and the revolution that comes with information technology.

    “They were transmitting the answers to various questions through the social media, using their smartphones.”

  • Adeleke faults Buhari’s spokesman on forgery allegation

    Senator Ademola Adeleke, representing Osun West Senatorial District has faulted allegation that he presented forged school results to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) during the last governorship election in Osun State.

    Adeleke, who attributed the allegation to the spokesman of President Muhammadu Buhari Campaign Organisation, Festus Keyamo (SAN), argued that the lawyer acted out of ignorance.

    The Senator, in a statement authored by Niyi Owolade for the Ademola Adeleke campaign Organisation, said he did not, at any time forge any certificate for election or any other purpose.

    Part of the statement reads: “Our attention has been drawn to a tweet credited to Mr. Festus Keyamo that Senator Ademola Adeleke forged a statement of result he presented for election and that WAEC did not attest his certificate.

    “We suspect that Mr. Keyamo must have been misinformed or failed to get his facts correctly.

    “For his information and that of the general public, both WAEC and the school principal of Ede Muslim High school, Ede attested Senator Adeleke’s result through sworn affidavits before FCT High Court, Bwari.

    “We advise the President’s campaign spokesman to get his facts straight before making public statements.

    “Being a Senior Advocate of Nigeria demands that level of responsibility. Senator Ademola Adeleke did not at any time forge any certificate for this election or for any other purpose.

    “Let us repeat for the umpteenth time that the principal of Ede Muslim High School, Ede and WAEC were summoned by the court in a case filed by the APC against Senator Adeleke.

    “The principal through a sworn affidavit attested the statement of results presented by the PDP candidate for his election and a Deputy Registrar of WAEC did the same through an affidavit of evidence.

    READ ALSO: Adeleke qualifies to be governor, says Appeal Court

    “The two affidavits were widely published in the newspapers and are available in court papers. WAEC not only attested Adeleke’s result, the school authority, through the principal also did.

    “At this stage in Osun election cases, all the facts are in public domain and nothing can be spinned again.

    “First, the public is fully aware that both WAEC and the Principal attested to Adeleke’s qualification.

    “Secondly, by the combined effect of Sections 177 and 318 of the 1999 constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as amended, Senator Ademola Adeleke is qualified to contest for the office of a State Governor.

    “Thirdly and much more critical, WAEC and the principal affirmed in their respective affidavits that there was no forgery as results submitted by Adeleke tallied with their records.

    “We wish to conclude by informing the public once again that apart from the above attestation of Adeleke’s qualification, there are two subsisting high court judgments, affirming Senator Adeleke’s eligibility to contest for office if Governor.”

  • Candidates forced to abandon WASSCE for UTME

    Some candidates writing the ongoing 2019 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) for schools were not able to sit for their examination on Thursday because it clashed with the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) which started the same day with three sessions scheduled daily.

    JAMB and WAEC had promised to sought out the clash in timetables which affects about 23 Entrepreneurship/Trade WASSCE subjects scheduled to hold during the six days that the UTME would last.

    SS3 candidates writing the WASSCE were scheduled to write Animal Husbandry and Store Management today (April 11, 2019) but because the time clashed with the UTME, missed the examination.

    A parent who does not wish to be named, said his daughter and about 20 others at Providence High School, Fagba, could not sit for Animal Husbandry scheduled to start 9.30am – 30 minutes after they were to write their UTME at the Lagooz CBT Centre, O’Riley Agege, Lagos.

    “My daughter could not write Animal Husbandry today. She was to write UTME at Lagooz School by 9 a.m. But the exam did not start until 11am. By the time she got back to her school, she did not meet the invigilators for (Animal Husbandry). She was not the only one affected.

    “There were about 20 of them. But their teachers told them they could get a chance to do an alternative version of the paper on the 15th,” he said.

    A teacher at Winners Treasure Kids School, Ketu, also said the clashing timetables did not affect most pupils in her school.

    A pupil from another school said nobody was affected in his school because none of them offered the subjects written on Thursday.

    Meanwhile, the UTME went well in centres monitored by The Nation.

    At Connection Computer training Institute, Cele, Ojo, accreditation and biometrics of candidates started late and was slow.

    There were four sessions for the exam – 7am, 9am, 1:30pm and 3:00pm.

    Miss Shittu Ronke, a candidate in the first batch, said the examination went well save for minor delays.
    ‘’I started the examination after 8 and finished after 10. I am a science student. I did English, Chemistry, Biology and physics. The physics was hard for me but I did my best. I am happy because my computer did not trip off during the examination. After the examination, we were told to stay in a room from there we queued up and thumb printed out’’.

    Mr Kalu Uche, another candidate in the second batch, also said his system did not malfunction.

    However, a female candidate, who was meant to write Physics, Chemistry, Biology and English 7am, missed her examination.

    Read Also: JAMB to investigate inability of candidates to do biometric verification

    She said she was late because she lived too far from the CBT Centre. She got to the centre some minutes to 8am.

    The candidate who identified herself as Oge, blamed her lateness on traffic.

    ‘’I stay at Ota. I left the house around to 6am this morning. On my way, there was traffic. When registering, I picked a centre closer to my place which is Festac but I was posted here. I was told to write a letter to the Jamb Zonal Regional Office if I have a reasonable excuse,’’ she said.

    A parent who simply called himself Mr Orji, said stopping Oge from writing the exam was pure wickedness.

    ‘’With this new order now, a girl missed her examination and there is no way or remedy for it. She was asked to write a letter to the jamb headquarters office. For me, if they had allowed her to write before immediately she came, she will almost be true by now. It is just pure wickedness,” he said.

    Speaking on the conduct of the examination, Mr Kayode Gbenga, a parent urged Jamb to improve on their biometrics.

    ‘’With what I have seen, JAMB is trying. But they should improve on their biometrics. In my opinion, thumb printing out should be done immediately after the examination. Why do the candidates have to stay in a room, queue up before they thumbprint out. It is a long process,’’ he said.

  • We’re working on clashing timetables, says WAEC, JAMB

    The West African Examinations Council (WAEC) has said it would work out the clash between its timetable for the West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) for School candidates and that of the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) which begins tomorrow.

    WAEC Nigeria’s Head, Public Affairs, Mr. Demianus G. Ojijeogu, told The Nation at the examining body’s headquarters in Yaba, Lagos, that the Council was in touch with the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB), and would work out the clash “internally and administratively”.

    He assured that candidates would not have to sacrifice one examination for the other.

    “I assure you that no candidate would miss their exams. We are working on it. The JAMB Registrar is in touch with the WAEC Head of National Office and we will sort it out internally,” he said.

    JAMB Public Relations Officer, Dr Fabian Benjamin, also said the board had received assurance from WAEC that there would be no clash.

    “The Registrar has reached out to the HNO and he was assured that there would be no clash,” he said.

    According to the WASSCE timetable, WAEC scheduled two subjects, Animal Husbandry (Alternative B) 2 (Essay) and Store Management 2 (Essay), to be written 9:30am-11:30am – the same time some candidates would be busy with the UTME which would hold in Computer Based Test (CBT) centres nationwide. Animal Husbandry (Alternative B) 1 Objective and Store Management 1 (Objective) was scheduled for 11:30am-12:10pm.

    Read Also: WAEC gives 1,050 tools to 21 schools

    A parent, Mr Suleiman Olagunju from Akure expressed concern that his daughter was to write Animal Husbandry same time as her UTME tomorrow.

    He said: “I called the JAMB office and was told they were aware and would do something about it. But up till now nothing has been done. It was JAMB that rescheduled its examination because of the elections. That is the reason for this clash. WAEC timetable for the examination had been fixed.”

    The UTME is to last for one week. Meanwhile, WAEC has scheduled practical sessions for about 20 subjects between Monday, April 15, 2019 and Thursday, April 19, 2019 from 9:30am to 4.45pm each day. They include Metalwork, Home Management, Food and Nutrition, Arabic 3 (Oral), French 3 (Oral), Physical Education, Clothing and Textiles, Foods and Nutrition, Home Management, Music, Applied Electricity, Basic Electricity, Health Science, Health Education and Fisheries.

    The 2019 WASSCE for School Candidates began on Monday with three subjects, Catering Craft Practice, Marketing and Salesmanship.

  • Court: Adeleke unfit to run for Osun governor

    A High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) in Bwari, Abuja yesterday voided the participation of  Senator Ademola Adeleke of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the last governorship election in Osun State.

    Justice Othman Musa, in a judgment,  annulled Adeleke’s nomination as candidate of the PDP on the grounds that he offended Section 177 of the 1999 Constitution as amended.

    The section states that candidates for governor must be educated up to secondary school level.

    Justice Musa said while the court’s findings showed that Adeleke entered secondary school in 1976, there was no record showing that he (Adeleke) actually graduated.

    The judge said Adeleke’s name was no longer seen in the school’s register from 1980.

    Justice Musa noted that the result Adeleke attached to the Form CF001, which he submitted to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), was fake, as it was found to be different from the one presented to the court by the principal of Ede Muslim High School, Ede, Osun State.

    The judgment was on a suit filed by Wahab Adekunle Raheem and Adam Omosalewa Habeeb.

    The plaintiffs had accused Adeleke of not possessing the requisite educational qualification (secondary school certificate) to contest for the office of governor.

    They contented, among others, that Adeleke’s claim that he sat for the Senior Secondary School Certificate Examination in May/June 1981 could not be true because Secondary School Certificate Examination had not been introduced then.

    The plaintiffs argued that what was in existence then was the West African School Certificate Examination.

    They urged the court to, among others, disqualify Adeleke from participating in the governorship election on the grounds that he did not possess the required educational qualification.

    Read also: Osun tribunal judgment: PDP supporters celebrate Adeleke’s victory

    At the preliminary stages in the case, the West African Examinations Council (WAEC), in response to a September 11, 2018, ex-parte order by the court,  provided evidence that Adeleke sat for its May/June 1981 Senior Secondary School Certificate Examination.

    In its affidavit sworn to by Henry Sunday Adewunmi Osindeinde, a Deputy Registrar/Head of School Examination Department, WAEC, said Adeleke sat for the May/June 1981 examination at Ede Muslim High School, Yidi Road, Ede, with Centre Number 19645 and Candidate Number 149.

    WAEC attached a copy of the results of all 122 candidates who sat for the May/June 1981 in Ede Muslim High School.

    In the attached results, Adeleke is listed as number 149. He sat for only English Language in which he scored F9.

    He was said not to have sat for Literature in English, Islamic Knowledge, Geography, Economics, Mathematics and Biology.

    Osindeinde said in the affidavit: “By virtue of my position as Deputy Registrar/Head of School Examination Department, I have read the enrolled order of this court (specifically orders iv, v and vi) dated 11th September, 2018 directing and compelling the WAEC to depose to an affidavit confirming or denying the said orders contained in the said enrolled order and referred to in this paragraph and I wish to state as follows:

    “The said candidate named in this suit known as Adeleke Ademola, with Centre Number 19645 and Candidate Number 149, indeed sat for the Senior Secondary School Certificate Examination in May/June 1981 conducted by the council at Ede Muslim High School situate at P. O. Box 6 Yidi Road, Ede, State of Osun.

    “The copy of the result listing referred to by the court order as the ledger containing the results of all the candidates (001 – 221) who sat for the Senior Secondary School Certificate Examination in the said school is hereby certified, attached and marked: Exhibit WA1.”

    The plaintiff’s lawyer, Bankole Akomolafe hailed the court’s decision. Adeleke’s counsel Nathaniel Oke (SAN) faulted the judgement. He said the judge erred in law by going out of his way to source for evidence to arrive at his “unjust conclusion”.

    The lawyer said the court was wrong when it ignored WAEC’s evidence that Adeleke was educated up to secondary school as required by law.

    Oke said his client was  qualified for the election and met the constitutional requirement, having been educated to secondary school level.

    He said a High Court in Osun State had, in an earlier judgment, confirmed that Adeleke was qualified, having attended a secondary school.

    Oke said he drew the court’s attention to the fact that the case was statute barred in view of the fourth alteration to the Constitution, because as a pre-election matter it was filed outside the stipulated 14 days, but “the judge said my argument was an attempt to arrest his judgment”. “He went ahead to read the judgment.

    He went on: “They said he (Adeleke) did not attend secondary school. They (the plaintiffs) were the one who asked that officials of WAEC be subpoenaed to produce his result. And officials of WAEC tendered his result in court.

    What else do they want to prove that he was educated to secondary school level as required by the Constitution?”

    The lawyer said the issue had been settled by an earlier judgment of a High Court of Osun State, which held that Adeleke was qualified to stand election, having been educated up to secondary school level.

    “We have asked the judge to make the certified true copy of the judgment available to us on time, because we are appealing the judgment,” Oke said.