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Thursday, September 5, 2013
Five-year Imprisonment For WAEC Exam Cheats
The federal government yesterday rose from its
weekly Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting
approving the enactment of an Act to amend the
West African Examinations Council (WAEC) Act,
CAP W4, Laws of the federation 2004 to give
effect to the revised convention of WAEC, 2003 in
Nigeria.
Minister of Education, Prof. Ruqayyatu Rufa’i,
disclosed this yesterday while briefing journalists
on the outcome of the FEC meeting, stressing
that under the new Act examination malpractice
will fetch five year jail term for offenders or the
option of N200,000 fine.
The 2004 Act, to which an amendment is being
sought, states that WAEC is empowered to take
disciplinary action against those who have
contravened the Act by illegally using
examination papers and leakage of examination
papers, etc.
In particular, section 19(1) reads: “such
candidate shall not take or be allowed to take or
continue the examination, in addition, he shall be
prohibited from taking any examination held or
conducted by or on behalf of the council for a
period of two years immediately following upon
such contraventions and if a candidate aforesaid
has already taken any papers at the examination,
his result therefrom shall be cancelled.”
In addition, the candidate may be prosecuted and
if found guilty shall be “liable on conviction to a
fine of N200,000 or imprisonment for a term of
five years or to both such fine and
imprisonment.”
Section 20 (2) reads: “the penalties contained in
this sub-section (a) may be imposed whether or
not a prosecution for an offence under section 20
or 21 of this Act has been brought or is being
conducted or contemplated and (b) shall be in
addition to such other penalties as a court may
impose upon conviction for an offence under the
aforesaid section 20 or 21.”
Rufa'i in a memo tabled before FEC noted that
there was the need to domesticate the revised
convention establishing the WAEC, Accra, 2003,
pointing out that: “The ordinances have been
replaced with the conventions which confers legal
personality on the Council as an international
organisation.”
“The council established in 1952 and operated in
Gold Coast (Ghana) , Nigeria, Sierra Leone and
The Gambia and Liberia “now operates under a
revised convention signed in 2003 and functions
through committees.”
The federal government also directed the
Ministry of Justice to take further necessary
action on the matter.
The government also approved the policy for the
establishment of National Health Care Waste
Management for Nigeria. The Minister of Health
and his Environment counterpart, Prof.
Onyebuchi Chukwu and Hajiya Hadiza Mailafiya
respectively jointly presented a memo to FEC on
the policy.
As a signatory to the Basel Convention on control
of trans-boundary movements of hazardous
wastes and disposal, the domestication of which
is in progress and which necessitated the need
for a national health waste policy, guideline and
strategic plan, “Nigeria at present does not have
a coordinated healthcare waste management
system, especially in the area of segregation,
collection, storage, treatment and disposal,”
Mailafiya said.
She said the federal government, having
deliberated on the matter, approved the adoption
of the national health waste management policy
and guidelines, and the establishment of the
proposed National steering committee, taking
cognisance of the fact that in the past “it has
made some efforts in form of provision of high
temperature incinerators at tertiary health
facilities which form part of the healthcare policy
and strategic plan.”
The government also approved the draft national
fire safety code which will be implemented
nationwide.
A post-council document stated that: ‘The code
had become an urgent necessity in view of the
rapid urbanisation and industrialisation that
require safety inputs in the construction industry
and town planning as well as industrial chemical
processes.”
“The national fire safety code stipulates safety
requirements in buildings estate, markets and
similar structures which must be met before
approval of building development plans are
granted by relevant authorities,” it added.
The national fire safety code prescribes minimum
standards for the establishment of a reasonable
level of fire safety, Property protection from
hazards resulting from fire, explosion and
hazardous materials.
http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/fg-waec-
offenders-risk-five-year-jail-term-n200-000-
fine/158179/
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