Connect with us

Education

JAMB uses CCTV to monitor examination

Published

on

at

Listen to article
0:00 / 0:00

The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has introduced the  Closed-Circuit Television (CCTV) cameras as a measure for monitoring its Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME), in Abuja.

Muhammed Ibrahim, coordinator of the board in Niger, said all the examination centres were connected to the CCTV.

“Our staff, candidates and supervisors in all examination centres are being watched and recorded; it is part of our efforts to reduce or eliminate malpractices in the conduct of the test,” he said.

The coordinator said 32, 000 candidates registered for the examination in Niger and were writing the test in 14 centres.

He said the exercise was smooth in many centres except at Jumai Aliyu Babangida Development Centre, Minna where a system failure was recorded.

“The issue lingered a bit, so we immediately moved the candidates to the zonal office to write the examination,” he said.

He said the examination, which started on Saturday, would end on Wednesday, and promised a hitch-free exercise.

A candidate, Fatima Mustapha, who spoke to NAN in Minna, said that the process was smooth, and particularly commended JAMB for the speed of the bio-metric verification of candidates before being admitted into the hall.

Saidu Abubakar, an official of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), who also spoke with NAN, commended the candidates for being orderly.

“The candidates have been very orderly. There are no hitches,” he said.

Recently, Ishaq Oloyede, JAMB registrar, said 1.736 million candidates registered for the 2017 UTME, indicating a huge raise in people seeking university admission when compared with the 1,272,284 candidates that wrote the test in 2016.



Olawale Adeniyi Journalist | Content Writer | Proofreader and Editor.