NEWS
JAMB Registrar Monitors UTME Registration in Lagos

The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has urged candidates for this year’s UTME not to allow a third party do the registration for them.
Registrar of the board, Prof. Is’haq Oloyede gave the advice while monitoring the ongoing exercise on Friday in Lagos.
According to him, research has shown that most of the errors recorded on candidates’ data are traced to third party registration, and some of them can be costly.
He said that such registration by proxy also encouraged extortion.
“The Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) is not a school examination like WASSCE, where you can compile list of candidates before forwarding to the examination body.
“In the case of the UTME, we deal directly with our candidates. They should be allowed to do the registration by themselves.
“We must insist on doing the right thing now, by not allowing anyone to do the registration for the candidates,” he said.
The registrar said that already, some 1.2 million candidates had so far registered for the UTME as of Friday, out of the anticipated 1.5 million.
He said that the registration for the Direct Entry candidates had yet to begin.
The registrar described the registration process as seamless nationwide, while also commending members of staff of the board for a job well done.
He, however, decried the poor turnout of candidates in the centres visited, urging them to hurry and get themselves registered before the end of the exercise.
“What we have observed in these centres is the absence of candidates coming in to do their registration for the examination.
“As you have noticed, there are empty seats all over the place in these centres because candidates are not forthcoming.
“I can say for two reasons or either of the two reasons. One is that given the seamless arrangements that we have made, it is possible for all serious candidates to have registered and therefore, you cannot manufacture more candidates.
“This is despite the fact that we still have 15 days to go to the end of the exercise. We thank God for that and we also thank God for our partners.
“NIMC is doing a great job now, no longer the way it used to be. The staff of the board too must be commended for their commitment to the job. They are doing well.
“I have practically been to all parts of the country, to see what is going on and I can tell you that it has been hitch free.
“The second one, which is the unfortunate one, is that of prospective candidates who will not come forward now for their registration, until three or five days to the end of the exercise,” said.
According to him, there will be no extension of the registration of candidates for this year’s UTME.
He urged candidates to intensify their efforts in ensuring that they get registered within the time frame for the exercise in any of the 780 centres across the country.
“We still have 15 days to go. Just yesterday alone, we registered 84,000 candidates but we made provision for 100,000.
“The day before yesterday, we registered over 20,000, instead of 100,000 and so far today, we have registered about 39,000 and the day is far spent, which means we will not be able to register 100,000 candidates.
“Many of the CBT centres are doing well. Look at WAEC. They are doing very well and I am not surprised. This is what it should be.
“Some persons who are insinuating that we do not have the capacity, as you can see, WAEC has scaled it up even to their main examination now.
“If we had not done what we had to do, at that time, where will these candidates come from? Where will the CBT centres that WAEC is accrediting come from?
“So, what we need to do is to start from somewhere. The whole world cannot be going in one direction and we will be going toward the opposite,” the registrar said.
He said what was needed was to increase digital literacy of the people, both young and old, and then, keep on moving.
“We will not wait until we have all the powers in this world; we should just continue to do the best that we can do,” he said.
Oloyode said that the board increased the service charge for the CBT centres, but it did not affect the normal charge of registration fees.(NAN)
Foreign News
Pakistan Blames India for School Bus Attack That Killed 5

Three children and two adults were killed in a blast on Wednesday that targeted a school bus in south-western Pakistan, with Islamabad blaming India for the attack.
Terrorists targeted the bus in the city of Khuzdar, in the restive province of Balochistan, as it took students to a military-run school, Balochistan Chief Minister Sarfraz Bugti said.
Preliminary findings suggested that it was not a suicide attack, he said at a press conference.
The dead included three young girls who were students of grades 6, 7 and 10. More than 40 students were wounded, many of them said to be suffering severe wounds.
Bugti said that his government had intelligence reports that Indian National Security Advisor Ajit Doval was planning something in Balochistan but did not expect him to target innocent children.
“After facing a humiliating defeat on the battlefield, India has resorted to despicable and cowardly acts,” the media wing of Pakistan’s military said in a statement.
“Planners, abettors and executors of this cowardly Indian sponsored attack will be hunted down and brought to justice and heinous face of India will be exposed in front of the entire world,” the statement added.
Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif will make an emergency visit to the province where he would be briefed on the attack by terrorists, allegedly backed by India, said a statement issued by his office.
The Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), a rebel group fighting for the independence of the region from Pakistan, earlier claimed it targeted the bus, but said it was transporting the soldiers.
Islamabad claims that the BLA is backed by India.
Violence orchestrated by sub-nationalist rebels has surged in Balochistan, a region that borders both Afghanistan and Iran, and is a hub of Chinese investment and connectivity projects.
Earlier this month, India and Pakistan carried out tit-for-tat drone, missile and airstrikes targeting each other’s military installations and airbases.
The nuclear-armed rivals agreed to the ceasefire on May 10 but continue to accuse each other for terror incidents. (dpa/NAN)
NEWS
Dangote Supports Benue Women Entrepreneurs With N100,000 Each

In a bold boost for women entrepreneurship in Nigeria, Dangote Cement Plc has empowered businesswomen in host communities in Benue State with cash grants, thus deepening business activities in the State.
The women empowerment programme came months after the Dangote Cement in Gboko increased bursary payments to students of host communities by more than 100 per cent.
Speaking at the ceremony Wednesday in Gboko, Group Head, Social Performance, Dangote Cement Plc, Mr.
Wakeel Olayiwola said: “”Through this scheme, selected women entrepreneurs in host communities will receive ₦100,000 grants each to strengthen and expand their businesses.“The financial support aims to boost local enterprise development at the grassroots level, empowering female business owners with capital to scale their operations.
Each beneficiary will use the funds to address specific business needs, from purchasing inventory to upgrading equipment, creating tangible economic impact in their communities.”Mr. Wakeel said:” When women succeed in business, they invest in their families’ education, health, and well-being, breaking the cycle of poverty and creating a ripple effect of positive change in their communities.”
He said the programme will “enable the women to generate more income to sustain their families, reduce women’s over-reliance on their husbands.”
He said the money is a grant and would not be paid back to the Dangote Cement.
According to him, traditional leaders of: Quarry, Tse-Kucha, Amua, Mbazembe, Mbatur and Pass Brothers host communities, as well as the Dangote Community Consultative Committee (DCCC) were responsible for the identification and selection of beneficiaries.
It would be recalled that a wave of jubilation had swept through Gboko communities last year when the Dangote Cement Plc and six host communities signed a historic Community Development Agreement (CDA).
He said the company will monitor progress of the women entrepreneurs and evaluate how the money is being invested.
Speaking, Acting Plant Director Engr. Munusamy Murugan said the empowerment will be an annual event.
Engr Murugan who was represented by Engr Tavershima Soom said other economic empowerment programmes lined up include farmers programme and youth skill acquisition programme, among several others.
In his remarks, Head of the Social Performance, Gboko Plant, Johnson Kor, told the community representatives that the company is doing a lot to support members of the communities, urging them to be good ambassadors of the Dangote Cement Plc.
Reacting, a beneficiary, Ruth Ikyowe Tser, 37, said she will invest the money into her cassava farming business, while commending the company for the support.
Similarly, Mrs Vishigh Comfort Msurshiona, 39, said she will use the money to grow her trade in commodities.
community
UTME: JAMB To Hold Additional Mop-up Exam for Absent Candidates

Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) says it will conduct additional mop-up examinations for candidates who missed the 2025 Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME).
JAMB Registrar, Prof. Is-haq Oloyede, stated this on Wednesday in Abuja at a meeting with key stakeholders to address the challenges encountered during the 2025 UTME.
Oloyede said that the board would accommodate the estimated 5.
6 per cent of candidates who missed the examination by organising a special mop-up exercise.He said that the board had extended the opportunity to all the affected candidates, regardless of the reasons for their absence.
“Normally, we hold one mop-up nationwide for those with one issue or the other.
“But this time, we are creating a new mop-up. Even those who missed the earlier examination due to absence, we will extend this opportunity to them.
“It is not that we are doing something extraordinary; in class, you make up an examination when students miss it for one reason or the other; we just don’t allow abuse of that.
“So we will allow all the candidates who missed the main examination for any reason to take part in this mop-up,” he said.
Oloyede criticised some public commentators who misunderstood and misrepresented the role of UTME, while clarifying that UTME was a placement test and not an achievement test.
According to him, the purpose of the examination is to rank candidates for available spaces in institutions and not to measure intelligence or overall academic potential.
The registrar further stated that high UTME score was not the sole determinant of admission, adding that combined performance, including post-UTME scores and school assessments, could significantly affect a candidate’s ranking.
While acknowledging the emotional strain experienced while announcing the UTME results, he noted that this was not indicative of an institutional weakness.
He expressed JAMB’s commitment to resolving issues affecting the examination process, even as he rejected comments suggesting that the administrative failure was due to incompetence or ethnic bias.
“I want to say this clearly, particularly because I accepted responsibility, not because I do not know how to do the work.
“I say it for the fourth time that no conspiracy theory is relevant to this case.
“Something happened; like people who have been doing something well for years and something just went wrong. That I should now throw them under the bus? No,” he said.
Oloyede, who frowned at those exploiting difficulties to promote ethnic or conspiracy-driven narratives, urged stakeholders to stop ethnic profiling in the education sector.
According to him, many of the criticisms of JAMB’s operations are rooted in ignorance.
The registrar, however, commended his team’s efforts, while also appreciating the resilience shown by candidates, many of whom, he said, had continued their exams, notwithstanding the various challenges. (NAN)