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UTME 2025: MURIC Sends Notable Message to JAMB Over Claims Technical Glitch Affected Northern States

Published 5 hours ago3 minute read

Legit.ng journalist Ridwan Adeola Yusuf has over 9 years of experience covering education in Nigeria and worldwide.

Iba, Lagos stateThe Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) on Monday, May 19, addressed the Joint Admissions and Matriculations Board (JAMB) concerning an alleged fresh claim regarding technical glitches.

In a statement by Professor Ishaq Akintola, its founder, obtained by Legit.ng, the prominent Islamic human rights organisation claimed that the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) 2025 setback which necessitated retaking examinations did not only affect Lagos state and the southeast.

MURIC demands an investigation into JAMB exam glitches in the north/JAMB UTME 2025 results/MURIC writes JAMB over UTME 2025
Ishaq Akintola-led MURIC demands investigation into alleged JAMB exam glitches in northern Nigeria. Photo credit: @TIBmovement
Source: Twitter

According to MURIC, some candidates in certain parts of the north were also affected.

The group, therefore, asked the authorities of JAMB to investigate the purported report "and do the needful if found to be true".

According to the statement, this is necessary to ensure fairness, equity, and regional balance.

Meanwhile, southeast senators have declared as unacceptable the recent JAMB examination glitch that occurred in some centres in Lagos and across the entire southeast, saying it erodes national pride.

The caucus, in a recent statement by its chairman, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, acknowledged what it described as “the timely acceptance of fault as expressed through the open declaration of regrets and tearful apology by the JAMB management, particularly its registrar, Professor Ishaq Oloyede.”

The glitch behind JAMB’s 380,000 scrambled UTME score/JAMB UTME 2025
In recent days, criticism has been directed at JAMB over the unfortunate technical glitches that marred segments of the UTME 2025. Photo credit: @Temoignage_Akin
Source: Twitter

While the caucus expressed hesitation in fully accepting the narrative that there is a “narrow agenda being pursued to deliberately shortchange and harm the future of our children,” it warned that a recurrence of such an incident would not be tolerated, The Nigerian Tribune reported.

It stressed that the glitch could potentially jeopardize children's educational advancement in the southeast geopolitical zone.

Legit.ng reports that JAMB had earlier admitted that a technical error affected the results of more than 370,000 candidates across 157 centres in Lagos state and the southeast.

Following a stakeholder review amid widespread concerns over candidates' low scores, the board admitted to a technical issue.

The problem was attributed to a faulty software update, prompting the board to announce a re-examination for affected candidates, starting May 16.

Over 1.9 million candidates sat this year’s UTME, of which 1.5 million—or 78 per cent—scored less than 200 out of the 400 obtainable points.

However, some candidates protested their low scores, insisting they performed better than their results showed. Other Nigerians on social media also criticised JAMB for what they described as a massive failure.

Read more on UTME 2025:

Earlier, Legit.ng reported that JAMB asked UTME 2025 candidates to check their results through the phone number used for registration.

Alternatively, JAMB urged candidates to wait patiently till the UTME 2025 completely comes to an end to check their results on the website.

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Source: Legit.ng

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