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Some candidates of the National Examination Council (NECO), who could not write some papers due to the recent Plateau killings in the state have pleaded with the council to re-conduct the examinations.
The candidates, who are taking shelter in Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps in the state, on Thursday told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the attacks prevented them from writing the NECO Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) and the Senior Secondary Certificate Examination (SSCE).
More than 11 communities in Jos South, Riyom, Bokkos and Barkin Ladi Local Government Areas (LGAs) were affected in the recent attacks.
A BECE candidate identified as Ezra Danjuma said he missed three papers because his school, Government Secondary School, Exland in Barkin Ladi Local Government Area was among the schools closed down because of the recent attacks.
“I registered for 10 subjects but could not write three papers because we had to runway from our community when the Fulani herdsmen attacked us. My father was killed in the process,“ he said.
Also candidates in Barkin Ladi LGA were said to have missed literature, geography, agric science, computer science, animal husbandry, additional mathematics and data processing and marketing examinations due to the crisis.
The Plateau Commissioner for Secondary Education, Mr Jude Dakur, speaking on behalf of the students said that a formal complaint was made to NECO on the issue and the council had directed them to collate the list of the candidates and the subjects they missed for possible consideration.
He said 13 public schools in Barkin Ladi local government were shut down, while statistics in the other affected areas were still being collated.
“At the Church of Christ in Nations (COCIN) IDP camp in Heipang, Barkin Ladi, 11 SSCE candidates did not write all the papers they registered for and pleaded with the examination body to re-conduct the papers.
“Bayat Yohana, a 16-year-old candidate said many of his classmates have lost a parent or both in the attacks and did not have the resources to re-register for the exams next year.”
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