Registrar of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation
Board (JAMB), Prof. Dibu Ojerinde, yesterday
accused the management of an unnamed tertiary
institution of sending the names of over 27
groundnut sellers to his organisation for
regularization and mobilisation for the one-year
compulsory National Youth Service Corps (NYSC).
The revelation came on the heels of the
management of the NYSC accusing the
management of tertiary institutions of frustrating full
deployment of ICT in the
mobilisation of corps members. Ojerinde, who made
the remark at the 2015 Batch ‘A’ Pre-mobilisation
Workshop in Abkhaz yesterday, argued that he
equally
experienced some frustration from higher
institutions and even his board members when he
introduced the same biometrics in the conduct of
JAMB examination.
“It is good that I have this opportunity to speak to
the representatives of the higher institutions. I want
to ask whether this trend of mobilising unqualified
prospective corps members into the NYSC scheme
was this how you were mobilised during your own
days.?
“There is a university where over 5,000 graduates
were mobilised. We have to make a commitment to
sanitise the system by doing the appropriate thing.
There were 27 persons a particular institution
mobilised for NYSC selling ‘pepper nut’ or groundnut
in front of the university.
“A corps member was posted to JAMB to serve, the
director under which he would serve said he could
not write his name. We wondered how could that be
and invited him to my office, asked him which
university he attended, he simply replied ‘na UNN. I
called the NYSC coordinator in Bwari to come and
take your thing because I know he is not a corps
member,” he said.
Similarly, the Director General of the NYSC, Brig
General J. B. Olawumi, in his opening remarks,
accused some CPIs of not living up to the
agreement of appropriately sensitising their
graduating students on the benefits of the newly
introduced ICT registration platform.
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