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Nigeria’s Exams Body, NECO Withholds Results Of 80,000 Kano Students Over State Government's N500million Debt

November 18, 2021

The nation's examination body took the decision over an alleged N500 million unpaid debt that the Abdullahi Ganduje-led government owes.

The National Examination Council (NECO) has withheld no fewer than 80,000 results of outgoing secondary school students of Kano State.
The nation's examination body took the decision over an alleged N500 million unpaid debt that the Abdullahi Ganduje-led government owes.

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A report monitored on BBC Hausa Service claimed the examination body seized the students’ results because the state government could not pay the NECO examination debt amounting to over N500million. 
According to the report, 70 percent of the students who sat for the final examination in 2021 were sponsored by their parents, but because of the unpaid debt by the state government, their results have not been released till date.
Kano State is among states such as Adamawa, Niger and Zamfara that owe NECO millions of Naira in examination fees, the report alleged. 
One of the affected students told the BBC Hausa Service that they, “are in a dilemma because post-secondary institutions are about to close the admissions for the session.”
He said he was waiting for the release of the NECO result to process admission into the university of his choice, but might lose the opportunity if the problem is not solved.
“We tried and contacted our school, but we were told to be patient, and time is running out. I don’t know what will happen next,” he said.
Efforts to reach the state Commissioner for Education, Sanusi Saidu Kiru, were unsuccessful.
Already, some rights campaigners have written to the state government, urging it to take the necessary action to avoid halting the students’ educational pursuits.
A rights activist, Ibrahim Umar, said the complaints they received from students at a time tertiary institutions were closing admission processes, made them to intensify pressures on government to solve the problem.
Umar said they would take the necessary measures to see that the results are released to the students, because majority paid for their exams fees themselves.
 

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