
JAMB Registrar, Prof. Is-haq Oloyede
By JOHN ONAH, Abuja –
The Registrar of the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB), Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, has said there was no secret plot by the board to shortchange the South East.
Prof. Oloyede, therefore, dismissed claims of conspiracy theories against a part of the country following the technical glitch recorded in the 2025 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).
The technical glitch affected the five states of the South-East zone and Lagos, with many alleging that the Board deliberately compromised results of the South-East candidates.
But at a meeting with the management of the board and Chief External Examiners ahead of the release of results of the rescheduled UTME Examination on Wednesday, Prof. Oloyede denied the allegation.
He added that the death of a candidate as a result of the examination is regrettable as the meeting observes a minute silence in honour of the dead candidate.
Professor Ishaq Oloyede insists there was no deliberate attempt to undermine students from the South-East as every candidate is Nigerian and has equal opportunities.
According to him, the board is taking a decision immediately that all those who missed that examination for whatever reason, the 5 per cent or 6 percent that missed the examination .
” we would be having mop-up. Normally, we have annual mop-up throughout the country for those who have one reason or the other. And it is for that reason we have also decided that even those who missed the earlier initial exam, who were absent, we will extend this opportunity to them”.
“So it is not that we are doing something that is (wrong), in the university we have make up examination… It’s only we don’t allow the abuse of it. So we will allow all the candidates who because of one thing or the other not to be present in this (rescheduled) and the previous main exam,” he said.
Prof. Oloyede also revealed that the pressure arising from technical glitches experienced during the UTME in parts of the South-East and Lagos State almost led him to consider stepping down.
“When this happened, my first reaction is to resign, but people advised me that the students will never forgive you because (it will look) like you have abandoned (them) at a time,” he said, adding that managing the rescheduling process effectively was a tough but necessary step to ensure fairness.
The JAMB boss frowned at those questioning the swift rescheduling of the exam for affected candidates, explaining the tight academic calendar that UTME candidates must adhere to.
“Most people are asking why the hasty rescheduling? Those people are far from knowing the reality on ground. They are talking from lack of knowledge. Anybody who knows how the education system knows that once JAMB conducts its UTME, from May WASSCE starts — that is the SSCE conducted by WAEC — and immediately NECO starts and immediately NABTEB follows and these set of students are the ones taking all these examinations. So, once you missed your time, it will be very difficult.
“Some are saying why can’t you fix it in July, August? Maybe they are oblivious of what happens when you do that. What of NDA? What of Police Academy, what of air force exams that are regulated? They continue with their admissions and you deprive these people admission because they do not have UTME. We are conscious of our responsibility to this nation,” he said.
Reiterating his commitment to integrity and national duty, Oloyede dismissed any insinuations of bias in handling the crisis.
“As chief executive of JAMB, I don’t really care where any of our staff comes from, all I know is that they have been doing their jobs for years.
“The emotional breakdown on my part was not a sign of weakness neither is it an excuse to abdicate our responsibilities. Let us not descend to a level where some people begin to pontificate because some people want to take advantage of the situation on ground.”
Meanwhile, the Chairman of the Chief External Examiners group, Prof. Vincent Tenebe, lauded Oloyede’s leadership during the challenging period.
“And we know that we have shown some kind of leadership by owning up, even though it wasn’t his fault or anybody’s fault. And I want to use this opportunity once more to encourage all of us to come together to ensure that this country moves forward. Nigeria is a very important country, not only in Africa, but globally,” he said.