JAMB Registrar, Prof. Ishaq Oloyede, said this on Saturday, during a monitoring tour of some Computer Based Test (CBT) centres in the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja.
Oloyede, during the tour, visited the CBT centres located at Total Child International School, Dutse, JAMB Abuja zonal office, Life Camp, Global Distance Learning Institute and Sascon International College, Abuja, in that order.
The JAMB boss, while insisting that his organization would not extend the deadline for the 2023 UTME, warned CBT centres against extortion of candidates.
It would be recalled that the sale of the 2023 UTME commenced on Saturday, January 14th, and is set to close on Tuesday, February 14th.
The JAMB Registrar said, “Registration is going on well except for some of these schools.
“UTME is not a school-based examination, it’s individual candidates and you can see what that school, Stella Maris is doing, collecting N30,000 from candidates in the name of JAMB and then end up missing up the telephone number of the candidates
“So once they keep the telephone number of candidates it is unlikely that the candidates when we are contacting them if we want to make a change in their timetable, you send a text to them and it will not get to them after they have graduated from the school and want to do a change, of course, they don’t have access to it.
“And that is a way of extorting the parents and we will take adequate steps to make sure that we stop that. One of the reasons is that we will tell every CBT center to stop doing bulk purchases of the pin and bulk registration so if a center sells more than one pin to a source or collect money for more than one pin from a source then we will sanction such center.”
He urged candidates to report cases of extortion, saying that there is a code for candidates to reach the board when they come across any case of extortion while promising there will be a reward for such act.