'VCs, rectors, others must be transparent with NELFUND disbursement' – Newstrends
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‘VCs, rectors, others must be transparent with NELFUND disbursement’

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‘VCs, rectors, others must be transparent with NELFUND disbursement’

Leaders of students’ unions in the southwest have stressed the need for management of higher institutions in the country to be transparent with the disbursement of Nigerian Education Loan Funds, NELFUND.

Criticism trailed the disbursement of NELFUND to students, as various schools were alleged of illegally deducted levies from the loan made available to students.

Addressing newsmen in Osogbo on Friday, Chairman, National Association of University Students, NAUS, Samson Adeleke, said Vice-Chancellors, Rectors and Provosts of schools needed to be transparent with the loan in a bid to sustain the scheme.

“We demand that Vice-Chancellors and Provosts of tertiary institutions in Osun State provide a detailed account of NELFUND disbursements and expenditures. Transparency and accountability are essential in managing these funds, and we will ensure that students receive the benefits they are entitled to.

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“As NAUS chairman, I urge all Vice-Chancellors and Provosts to take immediate action to address this issue. We need to know how these funds are being utilized and what impact they are having on our students. We believe that transparency and accountability are essential for building trust and confidence in the management of NELFUND disbursements, “Adeleke stated.

Also speaking, the coordinator of NANS in the South West, Comrade Owolewa Taiwo, opined, “We are watching the VCs and other managements of institutions back to back on the utilisation of NELFUND.”

He, however, expressed concern about the menace of cultism in tertiary institutions, urging their managements to provide maximum security support to the student community.

He further contended that they believe that a safe and secure learning environment is essential for promoting academic excellence and student welfare.

‘VCs, rectors, others must be transparent with NELFUND disbursement’

Education

ASUU orders lecturers to begin nationwide strike over salary delay

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ASUU orders lecturers to begin nationwide strike over salary delay

The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has directed all branches of the union nationwide to withdraw their services due to the delay in payment of its members’ June 2025 salaries.

ASUU said it was just enforcing the “No Pay, No Work” resolution.

ASUU branches at two federal universities, the University of Jos and the University of Abuja, have already begun strike action in response to the mandate.

President of ASUU, Prof. Chris Piwuna, confirmed the development on Monday in Abuja.

He said the institutions were only enforcing the union’s National Executive Council (NEC) resolution that any month in which salaries are delayed by more than three days, members should withdraw their services until the salaries are paid.

Piwuna bemoaned government officials’ indifference to the issue of academics’ pay, which he described as low.

He added that since the transition of university employees from the Integrated Personnel Payroll and Information System (IPPIS) to the Government Integrated Financial Management Information System (GIFMIS), union members had faced severe hardship as a result of salary delays.

He said that the union’s leadership attempted to contact relevant government officials, including the Minister of Education and the Accountant General of the Federation, but received no good response. As a result, the ASUU National Executive Committee decided to apply the “No Pay, No Work” policy.

He said, “What they are doing is just enforcing an NEC resolution. We have agreed at NEC that our members are going through a lot since our migration out of the Integrated Personnel Payroll and Information System. Certainly, our salaries are delayed for a week and sometimes 10 days before our members receive the paltry amount we get to help us carry out our duties well.

“Therefore, we agreed that if there is no pay, there will be no work.”

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The ASUU president said all institutions that had not been paid were expected to withdraw their services, insisting that this was the resolution at NEC.

He stated that any institution that had not been paid would join the action because “we are tired of talking about this”.

“We have spoken to the relevant authorities—the minister is aware, the Office of the Accountant General is aware.”

Piwuna emphasised that the administration had no legitimate explanation for the delay in wage payments because the payment platform is functioning properly.

According to him, when the money finally reaches the colleges, no one has complained about being underpaid or not receiving their compensation.

“So, the platform through which the payment is effected has not been the problem. It’s just a deliberate effort by the Office of the Accountant General to delay the release of the funds.

“The platform is working well, but those who make it work are not willing to make it work. We think it’s a deliberate act; that is the point we are making,” the ASUU president added..

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He pointed out that the federal government was scheduled to pay academics ₦50 billion in overdue EAA but only released ₦40 billion, leaving a balance of ₦10 billion.

“On the EAA you talked about, the total amount was N50 billion, and what they gave to us is N40 billion. N10 billion is still outstanding. We hope that this is paid quickly so that we do not have to fight over it,” the ASUU president said.

Jurbe Molwus, chairman of the University of Jos branch of ASUU, said that union members at the university would quit their services, citing a delay in the payment of their June 2025 salary.

Molwus stated that this followed a National Executive Council resolution urging branches to take action if salaries are not paid by the third day of a new month, as well as a congressional affirmation of the position. He stated that union members had boycotted lectures and statutory meetings.

ASUU orders lecturers to begin nationwide strike over salary delay

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JAMB releases mop-up exam results

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JAMB releases mop-up exam results

The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has released the results of its mop-up Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME), held on Saturday, June 28, 2025.

In a statement issued on Sunday by JAMB’s Public Communication Advisor, Dr. Fabian Benjamin, the Board confirmed that results for 11,161 candidates who sat for the mop-up exam have been released out of the 96,838 who were scheduled to participate.

“Candidates who are not able to access their result have been found not to have fully complied with the instruction to send ‘UTMERESULT’ (as one word text) to 55019/66019 from the same phone number (SIM) with which they registered for the UTME,” the statement noted.

Meanwhile, JAMB also provided an update on the ongoing investigation into a fake admission letter syndicate, whose masterminds were arrested in 2024.

“You will recall that a joint press conference between the PPRO of the Nigeria Police Force and the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board was convened on 13th April 2024. It was the outcome of the complaint of JAMB that a syndicate had engaged in the fabrication of JAMB-Admission Letters for interested candidates in exchange for a fee, following which a comprehensive investigation was launched.

“With the assistance of the Nigeria Police Force National Cybercrime Centre (NPF-NCCC), the police successfully apprehended the 5 ring-leaders behind the scam.

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“The five arrested ring-leaders, confessed to producing the fake admission letters and are currently being prosecuted at the FHC, Abuja in the case between Inspector General of Police Vs Effa Leonard and four (4) others. Following the confession from the syndicate, a total of 17,417 candidates were flagged as beneficiaries.”

The Board reported that between 2024 and May 2025, it had cleared 6,903 of those flagged candidates after they rectified minor discrepancies. The remaining 10,514 were referred to designated police investigation offices.

“Among the 10,514 candidates, 5,669 were confirmed to have outrightly procured forged letters while 4,832 candidates whose admission were then undisclosed to JAMB and who were being processed for condonement by their confessing institutions under a (2017-2020) ministerial waiver, impatiently engaged the syndicate to side-step the process.
“13 others were found to have been flagged due to one act of omission/commission or the other on the part of the candidates. 12 of the 13 candidates registered in 2017 when CAPS was established.”

JAMB revealed the institutions involved in these 13 cases include Bayero University Kano (BUK), Enugu State University of Science and Technology (ESUT), Ramat Polytechnic Maiduguri, Federal University of Technology Akure (FUTA), Ekiti State University (EKSU), Yaba College of Technology (YABATECH), Olabisi Onabanjo University, Osun State Polytechnic Ire, Ben Idahosa University, Obong University, and the University of Ilorin.

“In continuation of the screening process, the management of the Board at its meeting on the 5th July, 2025 decided that the 13 candidates flagged through one act of commission/omission or the other on the candidates’ part, should be requested to rectify their specific anomalies and proceed to print their new letters of admission as they belong to the batch of 6,903 earlier condoned.

“In addition, a total of 1,532 candidates, whose essential defence (though difficult to believe) was that they were not party to the commissioning of the syndicate which helped facilitate their admission letters, are hereby warned and condoned because their institutions had eventually processed their condonement of initially undisclosed admission — a procedure the candidates initially attempted to side-step.”

JAMB confirmed that 3,300 candidates remain under investigation, as their institutions have not processed their admissions through the legitimate channels.

“The Board’s screening processes continue and any candidate found to have employed or solicited assistance from examination and certificate fraudsters or deviated from laid down procedures for registration, examination or admission would continue to face the consequences which include prosecution under the Examination Malpractices Act which prescribes appropriate punishment even for the under-aged and their culpable mentors, guardians or parents,” it added.

JAMB releases mop-up exam results

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6 countries that let you study and bring your family along

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6 countries that let you study and bring your family along

6 countries that let you study and bring your family along

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