
Head of the national office of the West African Examinations Council, WAEC, Amos Dangut, says the exams conducted late at night in some parts of the country did not meet the council’s standards.
Dangut stated this on Monday when he appeared before the House of Representatives committee on basic education and examination bodies.
DAILY POST reports last Wednesday, there was widespread confusion across several examination centres as candidates sitting for the senior school certificate examination, SSCE, organised by WAEC faced hours-long delays before writing the English Language paper.
At some centres, the test scheduled to begin at 9 am did not start until late at night, forcing students to reportedly rely on torchlights and phone flashlights to read and answer the question papers.
Fielding questions from the House Committee, Dangut said that that the disruptions were due to logistical challenges arising from the need to print new exam questions after the original ones were leaked.
Billy Osawaru, a member of the committee, asked Dangut whether the exams were credible.
“Are you defining those exams as credible? Yes or no?” the lawmaker asked.
In response, Dangut said the exams were credible.
“It was a credible exam,” he said.
Osawaru, apparently dissatisfied with the response, pressed further.
“Can the exams conducted using phone flashlights as the only light source be truly considered credible? Can you show me, from your regulations, that exams written under those conditions are credible,” he asked.
After continued questioning, Dangut finally said the exams were “substandard”.
Chairman of the Committee, Oboku Oforji, in his ruling, requested WAEC’s guidelines and a detailed report on the conduct of the 2025 SSCE in the affected areas.
WAEC boss speaks on late-night exams