top of page

Peter Obi storms JAMB office, decries bottlenecks in serving students

  • Writer: Surefoot AfrikBg
    Surefoot AfrikBg
  • Aug 9
  • 2 min read
ree

By Madu Obi


Former governor of Anambra State and 2023 presidential candidate of the Labour Party, LP, Mr. Peter Obi, has called on the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) to adopt a more transparent and humane approach in handling its services, especially those affecting Nigerian students.


Obi made this appeal after he stopped the JAMB office at Amawbia, Awka South local government area of Anambra State, where he encountered a large number of students struggling to access basic services at the office.


According to him, many of the students were there to process changes to their course and institution choices, which are services that are typically handled at JAMB-designated CBT centres.


He was disheartened that most of the CBT centres had stopped offering the service, such that out of 28 accredited CBT centres in Anambra State, 17 had been blacklisted, with the people reportedly not informed of the specific reasons, except that they were “under investigation.”


“The consequences are far-reaching. Students are now forced to travel long distances from remote parts of the state, with some making up to five unsuccessful trips to the JAMB office.


This is a time of economic hardship, growing insecurity, and massive youth unemployment. We should not compound the challenges our young people already face,” he said.


Obi also decried the sharp increase in service costs, stating that a process that normally costs ₦1,500 now attracts up to ₦15,000 at the state office, adding that some of services are unofficial.


He warned that many students are at risk of missing admission opportunities, as several universities have already begun their post- UTME screenings.


While acknowledging that JAMB may have legitimate reasons for blacklisting certain centres, Obi urged the board to adopt a more compassionate and transparent process.


He suggested allowing affected centres to resume operations under strict supervision while investigations continue.


“Education remains the hope of our nation and bureaucratic bottlenecks must not derail the aspirations of our youths,” he stated.

 
 
 

Comments

Rated 0 out of 5 stars.
No ratings yet

Add a rating
bottom of page