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WAEC and the 2025 WASSCE Results: Why Nigerians must look beyond the noise
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By Adams Adamu
The announcement by the West African Examinations Council (WAEC) that it had temporarily suspended access to the 2025 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) results due to technical glitches has naturally generated debate, anxiety, and in some quarters, opportunistic criticisms. Yet, it is precisely in moments like this that society must pause, reflect, and separate facts from sensationalism.
Let us be clear from the start: WAEC’s disclosure of the issue is not a scandal, but a testament to transparency. At a time when many institutions in our country are quick to cover up mistakes, WAEC openly admitted to discovering technical bugs in the results presentation system during an internal review. Rather than letting errors go unnoticed or uncorrected, the Council proactively took the bold step of suspending access and launching a comprehensive audit, with independent ICT experts and oversight from the Federal Ministry of Education. This is what accountability looks like.
What many critics fail to understand is that WAEC is not standing still. The Council has, over the years, sought innovative ways to strengthen the integrity of examinations and curb malpractice. The latest of these innovations is paper serialisation, a system already in use by credible examination bodies worldwide. By introducing subtle variations in exam papers across centres, serialisation makes large-scale cheating nearly impossible.
In 2025, this innovation was deployed in Mathematics, English Language, Biology, and Economics. The fact that the conduct of the examinations proceeded smoothly is in itself a remarkable achievement, considering the logistical challenges of administering standardised exams to hundreds of thousands of candidates across Nigeria.
Yes, the post-exam results release process revealed glitches. But glitches in digital systems are not evidence of systemic rot. They are reminders that even the most advanced institutions, from global banks to tech giants, face technical setbacks. The real test of an institution’s credibility is not the absence of challenges, but the willingness and capacity to confront them openly and fix them swiftly. On this count, WAEC has passed.
Unfortunately, some voices have seized on this temporary hitch to peddle wild allegations of “systemic failure,” “mass failure,” or even “deliberate misconduct” by WAEC. These accusations, often championed by groups more interested in drama than truth, collapse under scrutiny.
Consider the claim of “mass failure” in English Language. Anyone with a modest understanding of education knows that examination bodies assess, they do not teach. If students are underperforming in language proficiency, the responsibility lies with our educational system at large: schools, teachers, policymakers, parents, and indeed students themselves. WAEC cannot be blackmailed into awarding grades as consolation prizes for a declining reading culture. Examinations are mirrors, not make-up kits.
Similarly, rumours of “late-night examinations” are unconvincing. WAEC operates within strict timetables under the watch of supervisors and inspectors. At worst, such incidents, if they occurred at all, were isolated hitches at a handful of centres. To extrapolate them into a narrative of institutional collapse is not only dishonest but mischievous.
WAEC has rightly emphasised that the integrity of scripts and marking is untouched. What happened was limited to the results-checking interface, not the grading of candidates. By temporarily suspending access, the Council protects stakeholders from misinformation and ensures that every candidate’s result reflects their true performance.
This level of responsibility is rare in our public space. It should be commended, not condemned. WAEC could easily have looked the other way, allowing thousands of students to proceed with results that were inaccurately displayed. Instead, it chose the harder, more transparent route: admit the issue, fix it, and reopen the portal with corrected data.
In addition, WAEC is not merely correcting the glitch; it is investing in long-term solutions, upgrading ICT systems, expanding stress-testing, and engaging independent technical partners. This forward-looking approach ensures that the lessons of 2025 will strengthen the system, not weaken it.
For over seventy years, WAEC has been the cornerstone of standardised testing in West Africa. Generations of Nigerians, politicians, doctors, engineers, entrepreneurs, and artists owe part of their journey to the credibility of this institution. To attack its integrity over a resolvable technical issue is short-sighted and unfair.
The Nigerian child, and indeed the African child, deserves an examination body that is resilient, accountable, and transparent. That is exactly what WAEC has demonstrated in this moment. Yes, the delay is inconvenient. Yes, it has caused temporary anxiety. But it also offers reassurance: this is an institution that cares enough to correct its mistakes before they become permanent.
Candidates and schools must therefore exercise patience. Within twenty-four hours of the review, corrected results will be available. The future of students will not be derailed. Admissions will not be disrupted. What matters is that when those results are finally accessed, they will be accurate, credible, and trustworthy. WAEC’s message is simple: we are not perfect, but we are accountable. And in a society where accountability is too often in short supply, that is worth defending.
■ Adamu is a former staff member of WAEC.
News
Sad! Venezuela Quake Death Toll More Than Doubles To 589, Over 50,000 Still Missing
More than 50,000 people were missing Friday after twin earthquakes in Venezuela, the United Nations’ aid chief told AFP as international rescue teams and sniffer dogs arrived to join a desperate search for survivors.
Interim president Delcy Rodriguez said the death toll was now at 589, a number that is likely to “rise significantly,” according to UN aid chief Tom Fletcher.
“We’ve got over 50,000 people missing, over 500 people dead, so a massive job to go through the rubble,” he told AFP.
Rescuers used heavy machinery, but also their bare hands, in a race to claw out people caught under rubble in the worst-hit earthquake zone, north of the capital Caracas.
At one of the flattened buildings, AFP saw workers using sledgehammers to break the debris and calling for “absolute silence” to detect cries from survivors.
Oil-rich Venezuela is facing its worst natural disaster in more than a century after more than a decade of economic collapse hollowed out hospitals and public services, driving millions to leave the country.
The country is still in a fragile transition six months after the United States ousted leader Nicolas Maduro.
Rescue efforts have been slow with desperate calls for more heavy machinery as families stand by helpless to pull out loved ones they could hear alive in the rubble.
“It is a lot of rock, and with bare hands it is impossible,” said Amparo del Giudice, scrabbling through rubble in search of her son.
Two earthquakes, measured at magnitudes 7.2 and 7.5, hit northern Venezuela within less than a minute of each other on Wednesday night, sending hundreds of buildings tumbling.
Elsewhere in La Guaira, three people could be heard in the rubble of a collapsed building.
“They’re still alive… There’s nothing more we can do,” said one resident, Antonio Bermudez. “We don’t have any tools. We have no way to help.”
A doctor at the Domingo Luciani Hospital in the city, speaking on condition of anonymity, said children were arriving in ambulances alone after being pulled out of the rubble.
“Some children provide their names, while others arrive with identification tape on their arms,” he said.
Help Arrives
A man searches through the rubble of a collapsed building as he tries to recover belongings following an earthquake in Catia La Mar, La Guaira state, about 30 km northwest of Caracas, on June 25, 2026.
National Assembly President Jorge Rodriguez said Thursday that more than 200 people were confirmed trapped alive.
The UN humanitarian agency OCHA said search and rescue teams from at least 17 countries were being mobilized to help find survivors.
Spanish, Salvadoran, Swiss, Colombian, and Mexican rescue teams were already on the ground.
A senior US military official landed in Caracas to oversee Washington’s relief efforts.
The United States said it was deploying two warships, transport planes and helicopters and mobilizing $150 million in aid. Washington has also suspended economic sanctions on Venezuela that could have hindered rescue operations for four months.
“Even before the earthquakes, millions of people across Venezuela were facing food insecurity, collapsing health services, protection risks, and limited access to basic services,” the UN and other aid agencies said in a statement Friday.
“We have a whole-of-government response. It’ll be big, it’ll be fast, and it’ll be effective,” said US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
Washington is closely involved in oil-rich Venezuela after US forces ousted and arrested president Nicolas Maduro in January.
China, India, Brazil and even war-battered Iran offered help, while Pope Leo XIV has sent an initial 100,000 euros in aid to the country.
UN chief Antonio Guterres said he was “deeply saddened” by the disaster as the global body vowed to assist Venezuela.
The strongest quake to hit Venezuela in 126 years will require “massive collective efforts,” UN aid chief Tom Fletcher said in a statement.
Threatening to complicate relief efforts, the international airport is in La Guaira and has been closed after suffering serious damage.
Two Brazilians, two Chinese, an Italian and a Portuguese citizen were among the dead, authorities in those countries said.
Tremors felt in Colombia, Brazil
Venezuela’s northern coast sits on a boundary between the Caribbean and South American tectonic plates, but has not experienced a significant quake since 1997, when 73 people died. Another quake in 1967 killed 236 people.
Wednesday’s 7.5-magnitude earthquake was the most powerful since October 29, 1900, when a 7.7-magnitude tremor struck offshore.
The quake was felt in neighboring Colombia, where residents in Bogota evacuated buildings as a precaution.
Tremors were also reported in several cities in northern Brazil, according to the country’s seismic monitoring network.
Scenes of panic and destruction also played out in the Venezuelan capital Caracas, where many spent the night sleeping on the streets or in their cars.
Rita Gomez, 60, travelled to the capital after seeing on social media that the building her daughter lives in had collapsed and that she was not answering her phone.
She told AFP that heavy machinery had arrived and there was “a lot of cooperation from the neighbors. We are trusting in God that they will find her alive.”
News
Insurgency: FG set to engage fresh 28,000 soldiers, establishes new training depot
The Nigerian Army has unveiled plans to recruit and train an additional 28,000 soldiers as part of efforts to strengthen its manpower and intensify operations against insecurity across the country.
The Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Waidi Shaibu, disclosed this on Friday during a press briefing in Abuja ahead of the 2026 Nigerian Army Day Celebration (NADCEL).
Represented by the Chief of Policy and Plans (Army), Maj. Gen. Bamidele Alabi, the army chief said the recruitment expansion followed the establishment of a new training depot in Amasiri Edda, bringing the number of recruit training institutions in the Army to three.
“Manpower is as important as the equipment required to fight insecurity. To this end, we have expanded our recruitment scope by establishing another training depot at Amasiri Edda, making it the third institution to train able-bodied civilians for the Nigerian Army, thereby enhancing our manpower,” he said.
“With this action, the Nigerian Army is expected to recruit and train an additional 28,000 troops to help stem the tide of insecurity across the country.”
Shaibu also revealed that the Army had established additional brigades and units while reviewing its force structure to address deployment gaps and improve responses to emerging security threats.
“Accordingly, the Nigerian Army has established additional brigades and units to boost our operations while continuously reviewing our force structure to cover observed gaps in our deployments and address emerging security challenges across the country,” he said.
The COAS said the Army had continued to strengthen its operational capability through the acquisition of modern platforms, combat enablers and strategic partnerships.
He added that the service had also prioritised personnel welfare by institutionalising measures to recognise gallantry and undertaking extensive infrastructure development across formations nationwide.
Reflecting on his seven months in office, Shaibu said the Army had made significant progress in operational effectiveness, infrastructure, manpower development, professionalism and civil-military relations.
According to him, his command philosophy is focused on transforming the Nigerian Army into “a more professional, adaptable, combat-ready and resilient force capable of decisively discharging its constitutional responsibilities within a joint and multi-agency environment.”
He noted that the vision is driven by a “Soldier-First” culture that prioritises the welfare of personnel and their families as a key factor in achieving operational success.
“We are also improving our deployment strategies and employing modern technology as a force multiplier in our efforts to quickly degrade all forms of criminality across the country,” he added.
The Army chief maintained that troops remained actively engaged in operations nationwide, saying their efforts had significantly weakened Boko Haram/ISWAP terrorists, bandits, kidnappers, separatist groups and other criminal elements threatening national security.
He assured Nigerians that the Army would continue to carry out its constitutional responsibilities in line with the rules of engagement while respecting human rights.
Shaibu also announced that activities for the 2026 Nigerian Army Day Celebration had commenced under the theme, “Protecting the Nation and Serving the People: A Way Forward for the Nigerian Army.”
He urged Nigerians to continue supporting the military and other security agencies in tackling insecurity.
“I urge all Nigerians to continue to support the Nigerian Army.
“This Army belongs to you; it is your Army. Let us all demonstrate patriotism and commitment to the ideals of peace and unity for national development,” he said.
Highlighting activities lined up for the celebration, the Army chief said Juma’at prayers would be held across all Army formations and units on Friday, June 26, while interdenominational church services would take place on Sunday, June 28.
He added that public speaking engagements in secondary schools nationwide would be held on July 3 to educate students on the role of the Nigerian Army.
On July 4, Port Harcourt will host the NADCEL Lecture, the Chief of Army Staff Literary Competition award ceremony, an interaction with media executives and the Nigerian Army Officers’ Wives Association charity outreach.
The programme will continue on July 5 with a medical outreach offering free healthcare services to residents of selected communities in Port Harcourt and the commissioning of several Civil-Military Cooperation projects.
The week-long celebration will culminate on July 6 with a grand finale featuring a ceremonial parade, presentation of the Chief of Army Staff Commendation Awards, military equipment displays and a research and development exhibition.
Shaibu said the event would also coincide with the African Land Forces Forum 2026, themed “Securing Africa: Advanced Defense, United Efforts.”
According to him, the forum will bring together African army chiefs, senior military officers, policymakers, defence industry stakeholders and security experts to promote regional cooperation, strategic dialogue and the exchange of ideas on defence and security across the continent.
News
2027: Former President Obasanjo Visits Kwankwaso in Kano(Photos)
Ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo paid a courtesy visit to the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC) Vice-Presidential candidate, Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, at his residence in Kano, on Thursday.

Obasanjo was received by Kwankwaso and the NDC governorship candidate in the state, Comrade Aminu Abdulsalam Gwarzo.
Kwankwaso’s media aide, Saifullahi Hassan, confirmed the visit in a statement, describing it as an opportunity for “warm exchanges” between the leaders.
He, however, did not give further details on what the two politicians discussed during the meeting.
Kwankwaso served as Minister of Defence during Obasanjo’s second tenure between 2003 and 2007, and has since then maintained a good relationship with him.

NDC Presidential Candidate, Peter Obi, is also a loyalist of the former President.

Obasanjo backed Obi in the 2023 elections and there are reports that he mid-wifed the Obi-Kwankwaso alliance for the 2027 elections.
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