JAMB Ban On Ejikeme Mmesoma Ends After Three Years
Three years after one of Nigeria's most controversial examination scandals, the three-year ban imposed on Anambra student Ejikeme Mmesoma by the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board is due to expire this July, making her eligible once again to sit the Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination.
Mmesoma became the centre of national attention in July 2023 after she claimed to have scored 362 in the UTME, a result that would have placed her among the country's highest-performing candidates.
Her claim initially drew public sympathy after she accused JAMB of failing to recognize her achievement.
However, the controversy quickly escalated after the examination body declared the result she presented fake.
JAMB insisted that Mmesoma's authentic score was 249 and alleged that she manipulated her result using her mobile phone before printing a forged copy at a cybercafé.
The board pointed to several discrepancies, including differences in her registration number, date of birth, examination centre, and the format of the result slip, noting that the notification template she used had been discontinued since 2021.
While Mmesoma initially maintained that she printed the result directly from JAMB's portal and denied any wrongdoing, the Anambra State Government set up an independent panel of inquiry to investigate the dispute.
The panel, chaired by Prof. Nkemdili Nnonyelu, interviewed JAMB officials, Mmesoma, her school authorities, and other relevant parties before submitting its findings.
In its report released on July 8, 2023, the panel confirmed that Mmesoma's actual UTME score was 249 and that the 362 score she presented had been manipulated.
According to the panel, Mmesoma admitted during the proceedings that she personally altered the result using her Airtel mobile phone before taking it to a cybercafé for printing.
The report stated that she acted alone and apologized to JAMB, the Anambra State Government, and her school over the incident.
Following the findings, JAMB withdrew the forged result and announced a three-year ban preventing her from participating in any of its examinations, stating that the sanction was in line with its established procedures for examination malpractice and result falsification.
JAMB spokesman Fabian Benjamin said at the time that after considering the weighty infraction committed by Ms Ejikeme Joy Mmesoma, and in line with established procedures, the board's management had withdrawn her 2023 UTME result and barred her from sitting its examinations for the next three years.
JAMB also maintained that its examination system had not been compromised, insisting that Mmesoma had simply falsified a result slip.
The scandal had far-reaching consequences. Innoson Vehicle Manufacturing withdrew the scholarship it had earlier awarded her following the revelation of the falsified score.
Her father, Romanus Ejikeme, later publicly apologized to JAMB and Nigerians, saying his daughter failed to tell him the truth on time.
In an interview with the Nigerian Television Authority (NTA), he said his daughter didn't open up to him early enough, adding that although he blamed her a lot when he found out, he was still appealing to JAMB and Nigerians to pardon her.
Governor Chukwuma Charles Soludo also directed that Mmesoma undergo three months of psychotherapy and counselling.
The controversy triggered widespread national debate, drawing reactions from politicians, education stakeholders, and civil society groups.
While some initially questioned JAMB's handling of the matter, many later accepted the board's position after Mmesoma admitted to manipulating the result before the state panel.
The House of Representatives had also called on JAMB to suspend implementation of the ban pending investigation, while former Minister of Education, Oby Ezekwesili, and former Minister of Aviation, Osita Chidoka, appealed for compassion and counselling rather than public condemnation.
With the expiration of the three-year sanction this month, Mmesoma is expected to become eligible again to register for the UTME, should she decide to pursue admission into a tertiary institution.
Her case remains one of the most prominent examination fraud controversies in recent years and is frequently cited in discussions on examination ethics, digital result verification, and the consequences of academic dishonesty in Nigeria.

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