The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) has said the student discriminated against for wearing hijab at a Lagos centre availed the two hours allotted to writing the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) despite the fracas.
In a statement by JAMB spokesperson, Fabian Benjamin, the clarification became necessary as information on social media suggests she lost part of the time she was supposed to write the examination.
The candidate, Ayisat Tiamiyu, faced discrimination at the UTME examination centre- Bafuto Institute, Lagos, when she was asked to remove her Hijab as part of the accreditation processes. JAMB later said in a statement that such is not part of its policies and assured that the officials involved had been reprimanded.
The body added that the situation was instantly addressed by a senior official of the board at the centre and that the candidate was allowed in after the usual checks with her hijab. However, reacting to reports in some quarters that Ms Tiamiyu was not allowed into the examination venue until after 30 minutes, JAMB said “Such insinuations are misleading.”
Benjamin said there have been calls in some quarters for the candidate to be compensated for the time lost. He said such a narrative is misleading and is aimed at “further inflaming passion and exacerbating an already-settled issue.” According to him, the mild drama associated with her entrance into the examination venue does not affect on her time or anything related to her examination schedule.
He said it happened within the time allotted for the biometric verification of candidates earmarked for a particular session and not the time allotted for the examination positing that “It is worthy of note that the incident had been thoroughly investigated by the Board and we could, therefore, state categorically that the candidate’s time was not affected in any way. The call for compensation is, therefore, misplaced not only because it has no place in our operation but because the candidate was not deprived of anything as the ‘fracases lasted not more than five minutes and happened even before the official commencement time for screening not to talk of the examination proper. It was on record that she was one of the earliest to present herself for screening.”
Benjamin also said the board took proactive measures to immediately caution the overzealous officials at the centre on the right way to go— that the fact of the matter was corroborated by the supervisor at the centre, who it noted is a lecturer of Islamic, and who has written extensively on the issue of hijab.