As hundreds of candidates look forward to knowing their 2016/2017 
admission status, the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board says it 
is still vetting the list of the first batch of applicants submitted to 
it by the various universities, polytechnics and colleges of education. The
 clarification came against the backdrop that the board promised to 
upload the lists for candidates’ accessibility three days after meeting 
with stakeholders in Kano, Kano State. Officials of JAMB and 
others stakeholders had earlier met at the Bayero University, Kano 
State, last week where they looked into the admission exercise. The new 
JAMB Registrar, Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, presided over the meeting. But as of Monday evening, the board had yet to upload the lists.
The
 JAMB Head of Media and Information, Dr. Fabian Benjamin, who spoke on 
Monday, however, said that it would upload the lists before the end of 
the week. According to him, the board is still reconciling all the
 data forwarded to it by the various institutions to ensure that they 
respected the laid down procedures.
The JAMB spokesman also stated
 that the final lists of candidates seeking admission to the nation’s 
universities in the 2016/2017 academic session would not be known until 
November 14 when the board as well as other stakeholders would meet 
again to determine their fate. The meeting, according to Benjamin, will hold in Owerri, Imo State capital. He, however, assured that the delay would not result in denying any eligible candidate admission.
The
 spokesman, who said the Kano meeting was successful, nonetheless, 
stated that stakeholders would meet again in Owerri later to determine 
the final list.
He, however, added that the Senate and the academic boards of the 
various universities had the mandate to continue to select their 
candidates in line with laid down admission requirements. A series
 of controversies had greeted both the conduct of this year’s 
Universities Tertiary Matriculation Examination as well as the post-UTME
 tests.
While the UTME, in which more than 1.5 million candidates 
sat for between February 27 and March 23, had hiccups occasioned by 
technical hitches, the Minister of Education, Mr. Adamu Adamu, at a 
combined policy meeting on admission to universities, polytechnics and 
other higher institutions in June, scrapped the post-UTME. Adamu described the sitting for another round of examination after the UTME as unnecessary.
A
 former Minister of Education, Mrs. Chinwe Obaji, and a former Governing
 Council Chairman of the University of Lagos, Chief Afe Babalola (SAN), 
among others, had faulted the minister’s directive, saying that it would
 affect negatively the quality of university education in the country.
The
 computer-based examination for entrance to the universities, 
polytechnics and colleges of education took place in 540 centres in 
Nigeria and eight overseas countries.
Of the over 1.5million 
candidates that sat for the UTME, University of Ilorin, Kwara State, 
attracted the highest number of applicants with 103, 238 candidates 
applying to study in the university this year.
The University of 
Benin, Edo State, with 81, 363 candidates and the Ahmadu Bello 
University, Zaria, Kaduna State, with 75, 383 candidates came second and
 third respectively.




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