Business Day (Nigeria)

Cross River suspends 31 principals over WAEC exams racketeeri­ng

...as govt pledges to due diligence in students’ registrati­on

- By Mike Abang, Calabar

HAVING being accused of exams racketeeri­ng and doctoring of the 2024 WAEC students’ lists dubiously executed to embezzle parts of the fund earmarked for the West African Examinatio­ns Council (WAEC) exams by the State, the Cross River State Government has suspended 31 principals of some public secondary schools in the State.

The principals were suspended by the State Government following the rumour making round that some Public secondary school principals had inflated the lists of students meant to attempt the 2024 WAEC exams, prompting the immediate investigat­ion and security reports which eventually nailed 31 suspended principals.

It was gathered that Governor Bassey Otu of Cross

River State had earlier announced free WAEC Exams registrati­on for all indegenous and resident students of the Senior Secondary School (SSS 3) in all the Public Secondary Schools, but some officials were allegedly connived with some Schools principals to swindle Government by registerin­g non-indigenes and non-residents of the State for the said exams.

The State Government, however, set up a Disciplina­ry Committee which found the suspended principals culpable and they were subsequent­ly suspended by the Cross River State Government.

Speaking during a Press Conference held in his office in Calabar, the State Capital on Monday, Stephen Odey, the Commission­er for Education, debunked claims in some quarters that the entire lists of Cross River indigenous students submitted by the Public School principals were padded and inflated, explaing that some of the lists and principals found wanting were under investigat­ion.

Odey said that the Cross River State governor had volunteere­d to pay for all indegenous students of Senior Secondary School writing West African Examinatio­ns Council (WAEC) exams for 2024 which prompted the perceived malpractic­es, pledging however that due diligence would be done in registerin­g those that merit the exams.

“In line with the directives from the governor, some principals submitted list of both indigenes and nonindigen­es, while some submitted duplicatio­ns of names leading to the setting up of a Disciplina­ry Committee.

“The Committee found out that 31 principals were culpable and should be suspended, while six were exonerated from the offence”, the Commission­er said.

Odey also promised to “clampdown on all illegal schools operated by people who don’t have the capacity to run schools in the State”, saying , “We will go after them, we will close them down because they don’t have the capacity to run schools”

Odey, who decried the lean resources available to the State Government, which he said, caused shortage of teachers in the State, noted however, that he had sought the approval of Governor Bassey Otu for the immediate employment of 6,000 teachers across the State

The Commission­er explained that his mission in the Cross River State Ministry of Education is to identify the perceived problems in the sector and profer solutions to them.

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