Jamb registrar, Ishaq Oloyede and AIG of police, Istifanus Shetima fielding questions from journalist. (Photo: PREMIUM Times)
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Nigerian Police Force are set to employ 6000 new officers in the coming
months as a total of 37,000 applicants took the recruitment test across
the country today.
37,000 Nigerians across the country on Friday, sat for an aptitude
test in the ongoing police recruitment exercise as about just 6000 are
expected to be recruited into Nigeria’s foremost security agency at the
end of the exercise.
The Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB), which
conducted the examination at 156 computer-based centres across the
nation, said the police paid it over N100 million for its role.
PREMIUM TIMES reported that while the examination was going on, the
Assistant Inspector-General of Police, Training and Development,
Istifanus Shetima, was at JAMB headquarters in Abuja and fielded
questions from journalists.
He said the final shortlisting and recruitment would be determined
by the number of vacancies and performance of the candidates, adding
that the minimum requirement for recruitment is Senior Secondary School
Leaving Certificate.
He said the police chose JAMB to conduct the examination because the police want a high standard.
“We want to maintain standard in the Nigerian Police Force that
is why. And we know JAMB has been very excellent in terms of conducting
exams, to get excellent people to join the Police Force,” he said, adding that candidates were not charged fees for the examination.
JAMB Registrar, Ishaq Oloyede, said the board’s job is to ensure
that sets standards were enforced while noting that some of the
candidates were disqualified at the centre.
“We conduct exams for different agencies both in the public and
private sectors because we have the facility which is a public facility
and they are at minimum cost; we allow people to use the system.”
According to Mr Oloyede, “We have so many people who believe in
us, particularly those who want to do things transparently. But if you
want to do something that is not that transparent, JAMB is not the right
place to go.
“But if you know that you want to set the rules and you want
the rules to be enforced, JAMB will give you the services at a cost you
cannot get elsewhere.
“So far so good, The police complied with all the agreements
about setting standards and ensuring that there is no waver at any point
in time. The examination was peaceful across the nation, the only
centre that had issue in Otukpo, Benue State has been settled.”
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