The Nigeria Youth Forum (NYF), a prominent civil advocacy organisation, has demanded the overhauling of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) following the board’s recent admission of technical errors that marred the 2025 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).
In a statement issued on Friday in Kaduna by its National President, Comrade Toriah Olajide Filani, the group described the situation as “administrative recklessness of tragic proportions.” It stressed that the continued leadership of Prof. Oloyede has led to pains of thousands of Nigerian students whose academic futures have been jeopardised.
The forum noted that fresh data released in the aftermath of the controversy shows that approximately 379,997 candidates were affected by computer glitches out of a total of 1.95 million who registered for the exam.
“This translates to an error rate of 19.5%, a figure that the NYF has described as “far beyond any acceptable threshold” in any credible examination system.
“In light of this,” Filani stated, “the most appropriate course of action would be an outright cancellation of the compromised examination sessions to preserve the integrity of the entire process.”
Comrade Filani decried the persistent challenges facing JAMB, stating that it is unacceptable for students in this modern era to travel across states to sit for a single examination, only to later be informed that their results were either inaccurate or outrightly cancelled.
ALSO READ TOP STORIES FROM NIGERIAN TRIBUNE
He questioned the state of the country’s examination framework, describing it as a national embarrassment that has outlived its usefulness in its current form.
“A young girl, Timilehin Faith Opesusi, has already taken her own life in Lagos due to a UTME score that may have been wrongly assigned. What greater tragedy must we witness before those responsible are held accountable?” Filani asked.
The tragic death of 19-year-old Timilehin, who reportedly died by suicide after receiving a disappointing UTME result, has provoked widespread outrage and lent moral weight to NYF’s demand for urgent action.
“The forum also revisited the 2023 case involving Mmesoma Ejikeme, a candidate accused of falsifying her score after she claimed to have obtained 362 in the UTME. JAMB dismissed her claim as fraud, and she later publicly admitted altering her result under pressure.
However, in light of the board’s recent admission of systemic errors, many Nigerians are now questioning the validity of that earlier judgment,the statement averred.
“Mmesoma may have been a casualty of a compromised system. JAMB owes her, and many others, a national apology,” Filani said.
The NYF also accused JAMB of drifting from its original mandate of ensuring credible entrance examinations. According to the group, the board has transformed into a revenue-generating agency that prioritises remitting billions of naira to the federal treasury over delivering accurate assessments.
“JAMB was never designed to be a cash cow,” Filani said. “But each year, it takes pride in announcing how much it returns to the government. Meanwhile, students travel long distances only to be failed by faulty systems or administrative lapses.”
The forum is advocating for a comprehensive overhaul of the nation’s examination framework. It has proposed the adoption of a Proctored Examination Model—an advanced, digitally secure testing system that enables candidates to take exams from home or designated local centres, with real-time monitoring, facial recognition, and artificial intelligence-based oversight to safeguard exam integrity.
“This is not a futuristic concept. It is a global standard that Nigeria must embrace,” Filani said. “We have the technology. What is lacking is the vision and the political will.”
The Nigeria Youth Forum (NYF), a prominent civil advocacy organisation, has demanded the overhauling of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) following the board’s recent admission of technical errors that marred the 2025 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).
In a statement issued on Friday in Kaduna by its National President, Comrade Toriah Olajide Filani, the group described the situation as “administrative recklessness of tragic proportions.” It stressed that the continued leadership of Prof. Oloyede has led to pains of thousands of Nigerian students whose academic futures have been jeopardised.
The forum noted that fresh data released in the aftermath of the controversy shows that approximately 379,997 candidates were affected by computer glitches out of a total of 1.95 million who registered for the exam.
“This translates to an error rate of 19.5%, a figure that the NYF has described as “far beyond any acceptable threshold” in any credible examination system.
“In light of this,” Filani stated, “the most appropriate course of action would be an outright cancellation of the compromised examination sessions to preserve the integrity of the entire process.”
Comrade Filani decried the persistent challenges facing JAMB, stating that it is unacceptable for students in this modern era to travel across states to sit for a single examination, only to later be informed that their results were either inaccurate or outrightly cancelled.
He questioned the state of the country’s examination framework, describing it as a national embarrassment that has outlived its usefulness in its current form.
“A young girl, Timilehin Faith Opesusi, has already taken her own life in Lagos due to a UTME score that may have been wrongly assigned. What greater tragedy must we witness before those responsible are held accountable?” Filani asked.
The tragic death of 19-year-old Timilehin, who reportedly died by suicide after receiving a disappointing UTME result, has provoked widespread outrage and lent moral weight to NYF’s demand for urgent action.
“The forum also revisited the 2023 case involving Mmesoma Ejikeme, a candidate accused of falsifying her score after she claimed to have obtained 362 in the UTME. JAMB dismissed her claim as fraud, and she later publicly admitted altering her result under pressure.
However, in light of the board’s recent admission of systemic errors, many Nigerians are now questioning the validity of that earlier judgment,the statement averred.
“Mmesoma may have been a casualty of a compromised system. JAMB owes her, and many others, a national apology,” Filani said.
The NYF also accused JAMB of drifting from its original mandate of ensuring credible entrance examinations. According to the group, the board has transformed into a revenue-generating agency that prioritises remitting billions of naira to the federal treasury over delivering accurate assessments.
“JAMB was never designed to be a cash cow,” Filani said. “But each year, it takes pride in announcing how much it returns to the government. Meanwhile, students travel long distances only to be failed by faulty systems or administrative lapses.”
The forum is advocating for a comprehensive overhaul of the nation’s examination framework. It has proposed the adoption of a Proctored Examination Model—an advanced, digitally secure testing system that enables candidates to take exams from home or designated local centers, with real-time monitoring, facial recognition, and artificial intelligence-based oversight to safeguard exam integrity.
“This is not a futuristic concept. It is a global standard that Nigeria must embrace,” Filani said. “We have the technology. What is lacking is the vision and the political will.”
ALSO READ TOP STORIES FROM NIGERIAN TRIBUNE
•I’m taking good care of them —Husband By Toluwani Olamitoke Grade A Customary Court, Mapo,…
I have been passing black stools for the past two weeks. Kindly let me know…
•She attended parties without my consent, travelled out without my knowledge —Husband A man, Aderogba,…
I was recently informed by my doctor that I have ‘pre-diabetes’. Kindly let me know…
Fatimoh Abimbola Mohammed is an entrepreneur and co-founder of Errandboy and ABottles Premium. She is…
On a hot Sunday morning in Warri, while others were in church or resting at…
This website uses cookies.