By Adenike Lawal
The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board has released the long-awaited results of the 2025 UTME resit, but the move has sparked fresh controversy amid revelations of widespread malpractice, regional distrust, and digital fraud.
The rescheduled exam, meant to remedy technical disruptions that plagued earlier sessions-particularly in the South East-has instead unearthed a disturbing pattern of collusion involving candidates, school owners, and rogue CBT centre operators.
To salvage integrity, JAMB summoned a nationwide emergency meeting with its Chief External Examiners, resulting in the formation of a verification panel led by Professor Olufemi Peters.
The board also engaged psychometrics expert Professor Boniface Nworgu to audit the results before publication.
“Under-aged” candidates had their results released but remain barred from admission, while first-time waivers were granted to those caught cheating via WhatsApp. Mop-up exams were offered to absentees with valid excuses.
Over 3,000 individuals linked to biometric fraud, AI impersonation, and mercenary hiring are now under investigation. Centres involved face blacklisting and potential prosecution.
JAMB firmly denied targeting South-East candidates, calling the disruptions systemic and not ethnic. It also debunked viral claims of result tampering, citing data showing 99 percent of affected students scored below 200.
As misinformation swirled, the board exposed one high-profile faker, Olisa Gabriel Chukwuemeka, who falsely claimed a score of 326. His real score: 180.
JAMB is now urging Nigerians to refocus on defeating exam fraud and protecting national unity through credible assessments.