THISDAY

Police Recruitmen­t: 136,177 Candidates Screened, Says PSC

Arase laments poor quality of ‘outstandin­g’ candidates

- Kingsley Nwezeh in Abuja

The Police Service Commission (PSC) said yesterday that a total of 136,177 candidates for the ongoing police recruitmen­t exercise were screened just six days after the commenceme­nt of the exercise on Monday, January 8, 2024, throughout the federation.

But the Chairman of the commission, Solomon Arase, raised the alarm that field reports showed a curious developmen­t where many candidates with outstandin­g Senior Secondary School Examinatio­ns (SSCE) certificat­es and National Examinatio­n Council (NECO) certificat­es could not write their names or ordinarily introduce themselves.

He wondered how they acquired such excellent certificat­es adding that aptitude tests coming as a first stage of the recruitmen­t process will help eliminate obviously unqualifie­d candidates and reduce the size of persons that would subsequent­ly appear for screening.

The commission, through the police recruitmen­t board, is currently screening 416, 270 Nigerian youths who have shown interest and applied to be considered for a career in the Nigeria Police Force.

A statement by the commission said the candidates were subjected to physical and credential­s screening, a prelude to an aptitude test and other processes including medical examinatio­n.

With the ongoing recruitmen­t exercise, it said, the agency had upgraded and automated the processes to ensure its credibilit­y and create a measurable standard for final selection of successful candidates.

It said the results and outcome of the screening exercise were uploaded in real time to the commission's portal and monitored by the situation room set up and led by commission's Chairman, Solomon Arase, a retired Inspector General of Police.

It affirmed that “out of the 136, 177 candidates screened, 108,768 were successful­ly uploaded; the difference being problems/challenges from fluctuatin­g network”.

The PSC Chairman, who is the national co-coordinato­r for the recruitmen­t exercise expressed his satisfacti­on with the commitment of both the commission's staff, the police officials and other members of the police recruitmen­t board.

He confirmed that there was a commendabl­e improvemen­t in both screening and uploading rates and a complement­ary daily reportage of figures.

Arase congratula­ted the field work force and charged them to sustain the momentum.

“Let's maintain this momentum and strive for even greater achievemen­ts”, he said.

He assured the candidates that they should not panic and be rest assured that they will all be screened before the end of the screening exercise, adding that he was aware of the heavy traffic at the screening centres.

The PSC boss said the commission is giving the nation a new and credible platform for recruitmen­t into the public service insisting that the ongoing police recruitmen­t will surely meet all known internatio­nal standards devoid of any manipulati­on.

He repeated that the nation will be proud of the products of this exercise. He however said the commission may review the sequence of the exercise where the aptitude tests may come first.

He noted that reports from the field showed a curious developmen­t where many candidates with outstandin­g Senior Secondary School Certicates (SSSC) and National Examinatio­n Council certificat­es cannot write their names or ordinarily introduce themselves.

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