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Obi Hails FG’s Suspension of WAEC, NECO Fee Hike, Says It Is a Victory for Nigerians

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The presidential candidate of the NDC for the 2027 election, Mr. Peter Obi, has described the Federal Government’s suspension of the proposed increase in examination registration fees as a welcome relief and a victory for the Nigerian people.

The Federal Government on Monday suspended the proposed review of registration fees for the 2027 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) and the National Examinations Council (NECO) Senior School Certificate Examination (SSCE).

In a statement, the Federal Ministry of Education said the fee adjustment proposal contained in its June 18, 2026 letter had been withdrawn pending broader consultations with stakeholders.

The Ministry explained that the proposed increase was necessitated by the rising cost of conducting credible national examinations. However, the Minister of Education, Dr. Maruf Tunji Alausa, directed that the proposal be placed on hold in line with the Federal Government’s commitment to inclusive, transparent and evidence-based policymaking.

According to the Ministry, consultations will be held with examination bodies, state ministries of education, school proprietors, parents, organised labour and other stakeholders before any decision is taken. It also assured Nigerians that the proposed fee review would not take effect until the consultations are concluded, while reaffirming its commitment to protecting students’ welfare.

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Reacting to the development, Obi commended the government for listening to the widespread public outcry but maintained that the proposed fee hike should never have been introduced.

“While I commend the authorities for listening to the widespread public outcry and suspending the policy, it must be said that the fee was an unnecessary burden that should never have been introduced at this time of great hardship, when we should be doing everything possible to invest in basic education and reduce the millions of out-of-school children in Nigeria,” he said.

Obi argued that at a time when many families are struggling to make ends meet, access to education should be expanded rather than restricted.

“Education is a fundamental right and a public good, not a source of government revenue,” he said.

He added that imposing multiple fees at the basic education level risks denying many children their right to education.

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“At that stage, the State has a duty to invest in educating and preparing its citizens for productive lives, not to erect financial barriers that keep them out of school,” Obi stated.

He further noted that true leadership is demonstrated not only by making decisions but also by having the humility to reverse policies that impose unnecessary hardship on the people, adding that many other anti-people policies deserve similar reconsideration.

Obi thanked citizens, parents and advocacy groups whose collective voices contributed to the suspension of the proposed fee increase, concluding with his familiar message: “A New Nigeria is Possible.”

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Education

FG Suspends Controversial WAEC, NECO Fee Hike

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The Federal Government has suspended the proposed review of registration fees for the 2027 West African Senior School Certificate Examination and the National Examinations Council Senior School Certificate Examination, pending wider consultations with stakeholders.

In a Monday statement issued by the Federal Ministry of Education, the ministry said the letter conveying the proposed fee adjustment, dated June 18, 2026, had been withdrawn to allow for a comprehensive review before any final decision is taken.

The ministry, in the release signed by the Director, Press and Public Relations, Boriowo Folasade, said the suspension followed concerns and feedback from members of the public.

“The Federal Ministry of Education announced that the letter conveying the proposed fee adjustment, dated 18 June 2026, has been withdrawn to allow for a comprehensive review and broader consultations with all relevant stakeholders before a final decision is taken,” the statement said.

According to the ministry, the proposed fee review was driven by rising costs associated with conducting national examinations, noting that registration fees have remained largely unchanged for several years despite increasing operational expenses.

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It cited higher costs of logistics, security, printing of examination materials, technology deployment, quality assurance and other services required to maintain the credibility of public examinations.

The statement said the Minister of Education, Dr. Tunji Alausa, directed that the proposal be put on hold in line with the Federal Government’s commitment to inclusive and evidence-based policymaking.

“The Honourable Minister of Education, Dr. Maruf Tunji Alausa, CON, has directed that the proposal be placed on hold in line with the Federal Government’s commitment to inclusive, transparent and evidence-based policymaking,” it said.

The ministry said the decision reflects its commitment to ensuring that policies affecting students and their families are carefully considered and responsive to public interest.

It added that consultations would be held with examination bodies, state ministries of education, school proprietors and administrators, parents’ associations, organised labour, education stakeholders and other critical partners before any decision is reached.

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Accordingly, the ministry said the proposed review of examination registration fees would not take effect as earlier communicated until the consultation process is concluded.

The Federal Ministry of Education reiterated that students’ welfare, equitable access to quality education and responsible policymaking remain central to the Federal Government’s education agenda and pledged to keep the public informed throughout the consultation process.

FG said it approved N50,000 as the new examination fee for WAEC and NECO for secondary school candidates from 2027.

The initial registration fee was N27,500, which means the new increment comes with an 82 per cent hike.

In a statement on June 18, 2026, issued by the Director of Senior Secondary Education of the Ministry of Education, Adeniji Ibrahim, the approval followed a request by WAEC for an upward review of the fee for the Senior School Certificate Examination for candidates from 2027.

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Meanwhile, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar and the National Association of Nigerian Students had earlier kicked against the Federal Government’s approval of a uniform N50,000 fee for candidates.

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Coal City University Slams Sahara Reporters Report as False, Malicious, Demands Retraction

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Coal City University, Enugu, has strongly refuted allegations contained in recent publications by Sahara Reporters, describing the reports as false, misleading, malicious, and lacking proper verification.
In a press statement issued on Thursday, the university’s management expressed concern over what it described as a series of inaccurate reports aimed at tarnishing the institution’s reputation.
The university maintained that the allegations published by Sahara Reporters do not reflect the realities within the institution and were presented without adequate fact-checking or engagement with the university’s position.
According to the statement, the reports follow an earlier publication in March 2026 which alleged that the university admitted students into a Law programme beyond approved regulatory limits. Coal City University clarified that it neither operates a Faculty of Law nor offers a Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.) programme, making such allegations impossible.
The university also rejected claims of salary non-payment and an alleged strike action by staff, insisting that the allegations are entirely unfounded and intended to create a distorted impression of the institution’s operations and welfare conditions.
Addressing reports surrounding a June 10, 2026 incident involving a student and certain university personnel, management stated that Sahara Reporters misrepresented the facts of the matter. The university disclosed that before the publication of the report, it had already suspended all staff and students directly involved and constituted a Review Committee to investigate the incident and make recommendations.
Coal City University further revealed that the student at the centre of the incident is a beneficiary of the institution’s scholarship programme, emphasizing that this status would not affect the fairness or impartiality of the ongoing review process.
The institution also dismissed what it described as inaccurate claims regarding its academic activities, internal administration, and treatment of members of its community. Management stressed that academic programmes, examinations, research activities, student services, and administrative functions have continued uninterrupted in line with approved schedules and institutional policies.
Reaffirming that the university remains fully operational, management accused Sahara Reporters of publishing allegations without verification and warned that the continued circulation of such reports could mislead the public and cause unwarranted damage to the institution’s reputation.
Consequently, the university said it has directed its legal advisers to formally engage Sahara Reporters and demand an immediate retraction of the publications, along with appropriate corrective action. The institution stated that it expects the reports to be withdrawn in the interest of fairness, accuracy, and responsible journalism.
Coal City University reiterated its commitment to academic excellence and vowed to take all lawful measures necessary to protect its reputation and institutional integrity.
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Nigerian Polymath Kamdi Okeke Graduates Summa Cum Laude, Secures Historic $442,044 Medical Scholarship in USA

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Kamdi Okeke, 21, an international student from Nigeria on June 11, 2026, graduated summa cum laude (First-Class with Highest Distinction) from Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, earning a Bachelor’s degree in Biomedical Engineering.

This August, with a 3.95 GPA, a 521 MCAT, and rich background in community service, Biomedical and AI innovation, he is heading to medical school to pursue his MD. After recieving acceptances from five top-tier U.S. institutions – including the Ivy League’s Perelman School of Medicine at University of Pennsylvania (UPenn) – and a waitlist spot at Johns Hopkins, he is ready to begin his medical journey. His admission to UPenn comes with one of the most significant academic honors in the United States: the Perelman School of Medicine Twenty-First Century Scholars’ Award. This meritorious scholarship covers the full cost of tuition, fees and attendance for the four-year MD program – a testament to his status as one of the most promising medical students in the United States.

Okeke’s Award letter reads in part, “Congratulations!You have been selected to recieve the prestigious Twenty-First Century Scholars’ Award at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. This meritorious scholarship … provides 4 years of full tuition and fees for the MD program. Beyond its significant financial value, the award recognizes an applicant’s outstanding achievement and leadership across a variety of domains, including natural, social and behavioral sciences, arts and humanities, civic and global engagement, community service, and entrepreneurship. Receiving this award is also a testament to your future leadership potential within medicine and healthcare, which we look forward to developing further at Perelman School of Medicine. Our stellar faculty is committed to providing you with a comprehensive medical education that is enriched with myriad curricular opportunities and extracurricular experiences to help you attain all of your career goals … We are all here to support your medical education at the Perelman School of Medicine, and hope you will make Philadelphia your home for the next several years, if not beyond! … we look forward to the privilege of providing you with a superlative education within a phenomenal University community.”

This award, one of the most prestigious in global medical education, follows Okeke’s trajectory of excellence that spans two continents and multiple disciplines.

A Foundation of Excellence/COVID-19 Community Response in Nigeria

Okeke’s journey to the pinnacle of American medical education began in Enugu, Nigeria. A true polymath, he graduated top of his Spring of Life Secondary School class of 2021, recording historic performance with straight distinctions in WAEC/SSCE.

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Earlier at 15, Okeke demonstrated leadership in community service during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 when he founded Youth Advocacy Against COVID-19 (YAAC) in Enugu. The initiative mobilized student volunteers to promote public health awareness through social media campaign on coronavirus containment.

The group also designed, produced and distributed protective face shields against Covid-19 infection. Speaking to a Nigeria national daily, The Sun, on 26 November, 2020, concerning the face shield project, Okeke explained, “We developed a cost-effective design for transparent face shields using Fusion 360 design software to create the visual representation of the face shield we wanted to make. Then, to keep our organization out of project pinch and have a proper project plan over time, we developed Gantt Charts, our project management tool, which assisted us in the planning and scheduling aspects of the projects, indicating the status of, as well as who is responsible for, each task in the project. We were thus able to effectively manage time and resources to maximize production. To fund the project, we emptied our piggy banks as we searched for, and procured, the materials for the production of the face shields: transparent film, 1.75mm thick foam, elastic bands, gum, adhesive tape, stapler machine, pins and other miscellaneous materials. After purchasing the first stock of the raw materials, we converted the family study into a makeshift workshop and production started.”

The group distributed more than 2000 protective face shields to healthcare workers and students across hospitals and schools in Enugu state, supporting frontline pandemic response efforts.

Awards at Drexel University

During his undergraduate studies in the US, Okeke’s tenure was marked by significant contributions to the scientific and entrepreneurial communities. He distinguished himself through academic excellence, innovation, entrepreneurship and leadership, earning multiple competitive awards. These include:
(i) Paul Scheffler Endowed Award: Recognition for “Outstanding Contribution” to his field of study – for two consecutive years, 2025 and 2026,
(ii) Baiada Institute Innovation Tournament — 1st place prize, 2024 – awarded for the most compelling startup concept and strongest presentation to the judging panel,
(iii) Spring Drexel Startups Fund Competition Winner, 2024 & 2026, granted to startups/ventures demonstrating exceptional ideas with clear value propositions, strong execution capabilities, and scalable business models,
(iv) Tau Beta Pi (TBP) National Engineering Honor Society Membership, 2024, recognizing students in the top eight percent of their engineering class,
(v) Dean’s List — winter 2022 to graduation
(vi) A.J. Drexel Scholarship and Drexel Grants: 2022 – 2026, in recognition of his undergraduate potential.

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Research Work at University of Pennsylvania

Okeke participated in orthopedic research at the McKay Orthopedic Research Laboratory at the University of Pennsylvania, where, besides contributing to develop wearable sensor algorithms quantifying real-world knee loading in veterans with osteoarthritis, he worked on biomechanics and rehabilitation studies investigating mobility during pregnancy, and tendon healing following injury.
His work contributed to ongoing studies aimed at understanding degenerative joint conditions and improving musculoskeletal health outcomes.

Meddibia: Bridging Healthcare Technology Gaps in Nigeria

As an intern working with modern Electronic Medical Record (EMR) systems in U.S. healthcare settings, and worried by his own experience with paper-based medical record back home in Nigeria, Okeke identified an opportunity to improve healthcare equity in sub-Saharan Africa. He collaborated with two other partners in Meddibia, an AI-powered healthcare software startup, to develop Meddibia EMR (Electronic Medical Record) system tailored for low-resource environments of sub-Saharan Africa.
The platform digitizes paper medical records while maintaining functionality despite unreliable electricity and internet connectivity. The goal is to modernize healthcare documentation and improve patient access across sub-Saharan Africa.
The team emerged the top winner of the spring 2024 Drexel Startups Fund Competition hosted by the Charles D. Close School of Entrepreneurship.

Evaluating and highlighting its mission to digitize medical records in underserved regions, the Philadelphia-based Starter’s Review, a news outlet that covers broader Philadelphia startup landscape, on August 20, 2024, hailed Meddibia as “a beacon of hope for millions of people in developing countries.” It went further to write, “The Drexel community is proud to support these young innovators”.

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WazobiaCode: Expanding Opportunities through Coding Education

Motivated by economic inequality he witnessed amongst his peers while growing up in Nigeria, Okeke led a multi-disciplinary team of Nigerian students in the U.S. who co-founded WazobiaCode, a nonprofit initiative dedicated to teaching programming skills to underserved youth across sub-Saharan Africa.
The organization launched a pilot online coding boot camp in Nigeria, aimed at equipping young people with marketable digital skills and improving their employment prospects. The initiative competed at the Drexel University Baiada Institute Innovation Tournament in the spring of 2024, and came tops. The award enabled the team to offer the pilot program in Nigeria, free of charge, to participants which equipped hundreds of Nigerian youth with digital skills.

Cofounding Xploit: AI Security Innovation

In November 2025, Okeke turned his attention to the burgeoning field of AI security. He co-founded Xploit, an autonomous cybersecurity tool designed to identify vulnerabilities in AI agents. The platform addresses emerging risks as businesses increasingly deploy AI systems capable of performing real-world actions using integrated tools.
The team developed Xploit as an automated red-teaming platform that simulates attacks on AI agents to detect weaknesses before malicious actors can exploit them. The startup first pitched at the
Startup-in-a-Weekend Hackathon hosted by The Foundry & Velric between November 21 to 23, 2025 in Philadelphia where it competed amongst over 100 entries and won the star prize in the “New Project Track” category.

Later, Xploit proved its worth at the Venture Building Hackathon in Philadelphia hosted, March 12 – 14, 2026, by United Effects Ventures (UEV), a pre-seed venture studio sponsored by JP Morgan, Nvidia and others.
Outperforming 15 other competing teams, Xploit secured the grand prize, with industry experts hailing Xploit’s pivot toward a “continuous red-teaming model” as the definitive future of AI vulnerability management, a promising solution particularly for small and medium-sized businesses lacking dedicated cybersecurity teams.

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Lately, on June 9, 2026, Xploit got a further boost in the spring 2026 Drexel Startups Fund Competition where it won the star prize in funding, in addition to access to mentorship, incubation space in the Baiada Institute, and introduction to angel and venture capital funding from the University’s alumni network.

A Path toward Medicine and Global Impact

For Okeke, the upcoming move to medical training at UPenn is less of a pivot and more of a convergence. His work to date which sits at a rare and vital intersection – spanning biomedical research, automated AI safety platforms, and youth empowerment – reflects a deeply rooted commitment to leveling playing fields and democratizing technology.
His trajectory stands as a powerful testament to what is possible, offering a masterclass in global ambition for international students, demonstrating that a rigorous Nigerian secondary school education can serve as a launch pad to the highest echelons of the Ivy League. More than just a personal milestone, his story underscores the rising tide of Nigerian innovators shaping global academia, and the immense potential of tech-driven solutions to close worldwide healthcare disparities.

Ultimately, Okeke’s journey, stretching from distinction-strewn beginnings in Enugu to the historic halls of Ivy League medicine, embodies the true spirit of a modern polymath: versatile, resilient, and relentlessly excellent.

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INSECURITY: Varsity Bans Students from Bringing Cars, Motorcycles into Campus

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The management of Prince Abubakar Audu University (PAAU), Anyigba, has banned students from bringing personal cars and motorcycles, particularly Haojue, TVS and other commercial-style motorcycles, into the campus until further notice.

The decision is part of a series of stringent security measures introduced following the June 11 security breach that claimed the life of a 300-level Biochemistry student, David Ocholi Solomon.

In a notice signed by the Registrar, Mr. Siyaka Audu, the university said the measures were approved at the institution’s 401st Regular Meeting of the University Management Committee held on June 15, 2026, to strengthen security within and around the campus.

The management also prohibited the entry of tinted vehicles, vehicles with concealed number plates, and unregistered cars and motorcycles into the institution. Staff members with approved tint permits have been directed to register their vehicles with the Chief Security Officer (CSO).

As part of access control measures, the university announced that the main gate would serve as the only entry and exit point for vehicles, while all other gates would be restricted to pedestrian movement.

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The management further directed the CSO to conduct a comprehensive registration and identification exercise for commercial motorcycle operators (okada riders) operating around the campus in collaboration with their union leaders. A speed limit of 35 kilometres per hour within the university environment will also be strictly enforced.

According to the notice, the institution plans to engage solar-powered tricycle operators to complement existing shuttle services and reduce reliance on motorcycles for transportation within the campus.

The university also made it mandatory for all staff and students to visibly display their identity cards while on campus, pending the completion of the ongoing ID card issuance exercise. Vehicle owners will be issued identification tallies, while the replacement of lost tallies will attract a fee of N5,000.

In addition, all visitors to the campus must undergo proper identification and security screening before gaining access. The management also disclosed plans to identify and block illegal routes leading into the institution to prevent unauthorized entry.

To enforce discipline, the university warned that any department or student found violating the existing ban on end-of-examination celebrations would face severe sanctions, including the cancellation of examinations written on the affected day.

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Such examinations, the notice stated, can only be retaken during the corresponding semester of the next academic session after the payment of fresh school fees.

The management further revealed that the Kogi State Government is providing Closed-Circuit Television (CCTV) cameras and other security gadgets at strategic locations across the campus to enhance surveillance and crime prevention.

The university also reiterated that the suspension of all unauthorized student gatherings and social activities remains in force until further notice. Additionally, the use of cross-body bags has been prohibited as part of the enhanced security measures.

Management urged staff, students and other stakeholders to cooperate fully with the 11-member committee investigating the security breach and comply with the new directives in the interest of safety and stability.

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Ojukwu University: Soludo Inaugurates New Governing Council, Says Former Council Was Dormant

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Ojukwu University: Soludo Inaugurates New Council, says former Council Dormant

By Okey Maduforo Awka .

Governor Charles Soludo of Anambra state on Thursday took a swipe on the immediate past Governing Council of Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu University Igbariam describing it’s dormancy as inexplicable.

To this end Soludo at the Light House Awka inaugurated a new set of Governing Council for the institution charging them to be alive to their responsibilities.

“You have a lot of heavy lifting to do,” the Governor stated. “I am confident that with the new leadership of the Council, you will provide nothing short of excellence. Work with the greatest level of integrity, conscientiousness, and passion.

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Consider what is best for the university and the generations unborn; we are all birds of passage. What is important is, while you serve, what changed for the better? That is your guiding principle.”

Governor Soludo did not shy away from addressing the systemic challenges that necessitated this transition, noting that the preceding council had remained dormant for reasons he deemed “inexplicable.”

He expressed particular concern regarding the integrity of recent academic recruitment processes. “I got the full report. I had to do my own due diligence.

The Governor expressed full confidence in the new leadership to reverse these trends, stating, “With Professor Peter Onwualu as your Chairman and Pro-Chancellor, your problems are solved. Just get going. Take the university to realize its manifest potential. With the calibre of men and women of such knowledge, expertise, and ‘fire in the belly,’ you will succeed.”

Responding on behalf of the newly inaugurated body, Professor Onwualu affirmed the Council’s commitment to transformation. “This will be a different Council,” he assured.

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“We intend to make COOU one of the top three state universities in the country. The problem of weak institutions is a Nigerian problem, but we will make COOU a very strong university. We covet the Governor’s support to make this happen.”he noted .

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