“Hello dear,
You have done your part. Nice
investigation. Now, its (sic) my turn to do my thing. Mind people you
step into (sic)… you are in Nigeria, not USA. Expect us. Thank you.”
That was the message sent to our
correspondent around 1pm on Wednesday after a report on exam malpractice
being perpetrated in the ongoing West African Senior School Certificate
Examination was published.
The sender’s identity number was encrypted as ‘CRACK MIND.’
PUNCH Metro had reported about
how some pupils sitting the WASSCE being administered by the West
African Examination Council cheated by subscribing to answer-peddling
websites.
The websites, which boasted of getting
questions prior to the time of the exams, advertised various rates for
different subjects and urged pupils to subscribe in bulk to get
discounts.
Testimonials of candidates who got excellent results after using the services of the operators were displayed on the sites.
Our correspondent had subscribed to five different websites for answers to the Commerce exam which was written on Tuesday.
The websites are examcrown.com, examsort.com, naijaclass.com, waecexpo.com and guruslodge.com
The operators of the sites demanded that
MTN recharge cards be sent to their phone numbers, which are
09069072051, 07063609771, 08167593558, 07032581573 and 08154766482.
They demanded N400 for link to the answer websites and N800 for direct SMS of the answers to candidates’ phones.
While examcrown and examsort
later resorted to Internet bulk SMS, using their codenames, EXAMCROWN
and EXAMSORT, to update our correspondent, others used telephone
numbers, including 08101038699, 07068088239.
True to their words, the websites
delivered answers to both the objective and theory questions through
text messages and their portals.
Shortly after the findings of PUNCH Metro were published on Wednesday, one of the website operators threatened to deal with our correspondent for writing the report.
The Ogun State Police Public Relations
Officer, Abimbola Oyeyemi, asked our correspondent to report the threat
to the nearest police station.
He said although the sender’s contact was encrypted, the police could investigate and get all the suspects arrested.
The Lagos State Police Public Relations Officer, SP Chike Oti, said the threat should not be taken lightly.
He said, “I have informed the state
Commissioner of Police, Edgal Imohimi, about your case and he has asked
that you come to the command to report for investigation to begin into
the matter. Upon their arrest, their activities will be revealed. That
way, we will be able to annul their plans. Threats should not be taken
lightly because a lot of journalists have been killed this way.”
Meanwhile, some readers of PUNCH Online have blamed WAEC for the leakage of exam questions, saying the body should check itself.
A poster, who identified herself only as
Abigail, said WAEC officials sometime sent account numbers to school
owners, demanding kickbacks.
She said, “Candidates are patronising
the sites as a result of the high level of corruption among WAEC
officials, supervisors and invigilators (teachers). What can one say
about officials sending their account numbers to proprietors and
principals of some private schools just for the purpose of aiding
malpractice; supervisors also collecting bribes to aid malpractice;
invigilators are not left out of the mess.
“If these people can perform their
duties with the fear of God, the operators of those sites will have no
choice but to close down and look for something else to do. In addition,
I want to strongly suggest that emphasis should not be placed on O’
Level results for the purpose of admission into higher institutions
pending the time we will get it right as a nation.”
A reader, Madukanaya, alleged that some
WAEC workers leaked the answers to their children, friends and
relatives, adding that examination malpractice was at the root of
corruption in Nigeria.
A poster with the alias, Something there is, urged the exam body to grill its workers.
“The question is that how did the
websites get hold of the exam questions before the exam day? Why not
check WAEC board itself and you’ll be surprised about the mess going on
there. The websites do not set the questions, then how do they get them
if WAEC officials are not involved?” he queried.
One Jed said a recent remark by President Muhammadu Buhari that youths in the country were lazy might be true.
“The President may be right by saying
some youths don’t like hard work but want everything free. Yes, they
want free excellent results with nothing in their brains. Aren’t they
truly lazy?
“This is appalling; appropriate authorities must rise and save our educational system from total collapse,” the writer said.
Another reader, Ahmad Kehinde, said examination malpractice had got to its peak.
“This is the level of decadence we have
sunk into in this country. It’s both sad and appalling! The blame should
rest squarely on WAEC Nigeria because the spokesperson admitted that
they were aware of the various sites and have not been able to do
anything about them! That is damning! Government should step in quickly
to dislodge these evil-minded criminals. This new exam malpractice
tendency is killing the scholarly values in our young ones, especially
among the private school students,” another commentator, Adestar, said.
The spokesperson for WAEC, Demianus Ojijeogu, denied that officials of the organisation were involved in the malpractice.
He explained that the website operators had continued to multiply due to lack of deterrents.
He said, “The security agencies have
been involved (in the fight against examination malpractice). The police
paraded six suspects last year in Abuja. Those people keep multiplying
and the ones that are arrested are granted bail and released after some
people beg for them. And that will be the end of the case.
“It is not true that our officials are
involved. We have done soul-searching. This thing did not start this
year. I am involved in this whole process and can authoritatively say
that our workers are not involved. If they were, they (the website
operators) will be getting the papers a day or two to the exams.”
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