JAMB cancels examination at Lagos  as 2021 UTME begins nationwide

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Some candidates who took part in the 2021 unified tertiary matriculation examination (UTME), which kicked off nationwide on Saturday, have experienced some difficulties in their attempts to sit the examination.

Technical challenges experienced by candidates at Certified Shipping Institute of Nigeria, Magbon, along Badagry expressway, led to the cancellation of examination at the centre.

The head of public affairs and protocol of the examination body, Fabian Benjamin, confirmed the development to our reporter on the phone.

Mr Benjamin said the affected candidates would be rescheduled by JAMB to sit the examination at a date to be announced soon.

“Yes, we are aware of the difficulty. The affected candidates will be rescheduled,” he said on the phone.

He, however, did not state whether the centre would continue to take part in the ongoing examination or not.

Man shares experience

Meanwhile, a guardian, who said he had accompanied a candidate to the centre, Andrew Adejo, said till around 3 p.m on Saturday when the cancellation was announced, no student was able to sit the exam at the centre.

He said; “The first batch of candidates were screened and allowed into the examination hall around 7 a.m but till around noon, the network was still said to be bad.

“The centre’s management initially came to announce that the problem was nationwide but when information started to filter in that candidates from other centres had no hitches, candidates, parents and guardians were charged and began agitation.”

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Mr. Adejo said he put a call through to JAMB for clarification and that the spokesman for the examination body told him of the cancellation on the phone.

Similar experiences

Also at a computer-based test centre located inside the Government Secondary School, Garki, Abuja, candidates could not start the examination until after 11 a.m.

According to a witness, the candidates for a 7 a.m batch were later divided into two batches due to technical issues with the computers.

“At around 11 a.m, the parents became agitated and attempted to enter the hall. They complained that their wards were hungry and that they should be allowed to go out of the centre to avoid a crisis,” the source, who does not want to be quoted, said.

The source said it took the prompt intervention of the security operatives to bar the parents from gaining entry into the hall.

In Nasarawa State, the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that parents on Saturday complained of poor network and malfunctioning of computers at designated CBT centres in the state.

Some of the parents told NAN in Nasarawa Local Government Area of the state, that the development would affect their children’s performance negatively.  Premium Times

Picture: JAMB exams in progress

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