The
Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission has
faulted the five-year jail term proposed for examination fraudsters. It
said the law was unfair to students, who were not provided with basic
learning tools.
It blamed the spate of examination frauds in the country on infrastructural deficiency in the education sector.
The Chairman, ICPC, Ekpo Nta, in an
interview with our correspondent, said more examination cheats were
found in schools where there was shortage of human and material
resources.
He criticised proprietors of schools,
both government and private, saying educational institutions should
meet standards or be shut down.
He said it was time stakeholders
examined the structure, which had been promoting corruption. He added
that once the system was corrected, the individuals would be corrected.
Nta said the last time students accused
of exam malpractices were brought to the commission, he investigated
their background and the schools they came from. He noted that record of
exam malpractices was very low in ‘top’ schools, including public ones.
“It is very rare. Laboratories,
libraries, computers, dormitories, dining halls and highly qualified
teachers are in such schools. How will a child who has gone through such
schools be involved in exam malpractices?
“By the time you begin to check those
arrested for exam malpractices, they are from community schools, where
there is a math teacher for the whole school; no science teacher. And
then, you turn around to arrest a child who is a victim (of the
inadequacies).
“If you prosecute such a child and jail
them for five years, when you never gave them an opportunity, you will
only make them toughened criminals when they are out. You didn’t give
them a chance in the first instance, then, you jailed them in addition,”
the ICPC boss observed.
President Goodluck Jonathan, through the
immediate past Education Minister, Prof. Ruqquayat Rufa’i, had
introduced a fine of N200, 000 or five-year jail term or both for
examination cheats.
Rufa’i had tabled a memo before the
Federal Executive Council, seeking approval for the enactment of an Act
to amend the WAEC Act, CAP W4, Laws of 2004 to give effect to the
revised convention of WAEC, 2003 in Nigeria.
The FEC had approved the amendment, with
the office of the Attorney-General reportedly fine-tuning it, before it
was taken to the National Assembly for passage.
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