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Benin certificate suspension ‘bad way to end our year,’ Nigerian student reacts

Prinz-Ufokimo Ime Udo, President of the Students Representative Council at Ecole Superieure De Geston Et Technologies University in Cotonou, Benin Republic, has voiced dissatisfaction with the recent halt of the review of degree certificates from his institution as well as others around the nation and Togo.

The ban came when a Daily Nigerian journalist named Umar Audu published an investigative piece in which he described how he graduated in less than two months from a Benin Republic institution.

The student leader said they news of the suspension dented their holiday mood.

“I will say as a student, it is just a bad way to end our year because all of us were enjoying our Christmas holidays only for us to just see an investigation by a reporter about the so called from our school. We did not actually receive it very well as students.

“To me personally I was thinking it was just a way someone wanted to trend on social media but I woke up on the 2nd of January and saw a new of suspension of certificate accreditation in Benin Republic; that was when the whole thing was done on me,” he said.

He, however, commended the Federal Government for their efforts to get to the root of the fake certificate saga, saying that he believes the reason for the suspension is just to unravel everything and carry out necessary measures to stop such activities.

Udo said he did not buy his admission into the Benin Republic University, explaining that the school was recommended to him by his friend after several trials writing the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) without success.

According to him, studying in the Benin Republic university is as rigorous as studying in universities in Nigeria and other countries. He said that any student, who does not meet up with at least 60 percent class attendance, will not be allowed to write exams.

The students’ leader, who believes there is more to the certificate saga that needs to be unraveled by the Federal Government, said that a lot of affected students and their parents are in panic.

He pleaded with the Federal Government to tender justice with mercy because there are still some competent students out there that actually acquired their certificate through a normal academic process without cutting corners.

 

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Sydney Okafor

I'm Sydney Okafor, a broadcast journalist, producer, presenter, voice-over artist and researcher, deeply intrigued by human angle stories in Nigeria and the broader African context.

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