Na wa ooo for this one ooo....The
Body of Benchers, whose responsibility is to admit and call successful
students of the Nigerian Law School to the bar, has warned Nigerians to
desist from begging for the students who failed their final Bar
examination.
The Nigerian Law School
was said to have recorded mass failure in the 2013/2014 final Bar
examination. About 50 per cent of the students reportedly failed the
examination.
The body, through its
Chairman, Chief Onomigbo Okpoko (SAN), said in a statement obtained on
Thursday that it had been inundated with requests of members of the
public for waiver and review of the results.
Okpoko
explained that the responsibility of the Body of Benchers was limited
to admitting and calling successful law school students to bar.
He
therefore asked the public to stop requesting for waiver or review of
the result “as it has absolutely nothing to do with the conduct of Bar
exams.”
He said, “Nigerians must learn to play by the rules always and accept what the rules of the Council of Legal Education dictate.
“Rather
than question the Council of Legal Education on the mass failure, let
us all for once, turn to those who failed and ask them why they failed
when some of their classmates made first class, second class upper and
lower in the same examination.”
Okpoko reminded the public that Nigeria had, in the past, produced lawyers for the world court and for other countries.
He
thus maintained that there was the need to encourage the students, who
are future magistrates, judges and Justices to be hardworking so as to
be able to pass their Bar examination at the Law School.
He
added, “The lawyers we produce from our Law School must attain the
standard of pass prescribed by the Law School authorities. It is not for
the Body of Benchers or indeed anyone to interfere in any manner with
the results released by the Council of Legal Education.
“Every
institution of learning has its own regulations as to examinations and
the mark to attain to be successful in the exams conducted by that
institution. This is not limited to Nigeria.
“The
standard set by the Council of Legal Education for passing its exams,
are matters within the domestic jurisdiction of the Council. All those
who love this country and desire to see Nigeria produce the best lawyers
for the world should accept the results as published and encourage
those who failed to work hard when the opportunity comes again.”
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