Osun Guber: WAEC Confirms Adeleke’s Result, Candidate Had F9 in English
Featured, Latest Headlines, News Wednesday, September 19th, 2018(AFRICAN EXAMINER) – The West African Examinations Council (WAEC) has confirmed before the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory in Bwari, Abuja that the candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) for the Saturday, September 22, Osun Governorship election Senator Ademola Adeleke, sat for its examination in 1981.
WAEC stated this in a court filing which it made in compliance with an order issued by Justice Othman Musa on last week Tuesday, September 11.
In the results attached to the documents filed by WAEC, Senator Adeleke was listed as number 149 out of the 221 candidates who sat for the May/June 1981 examinations of the Council at Ede Muslim High School in Ede, Osun State.
The results showed that he sat for only English Language in which he had F9.
He did not sit for other registered subjects which included Mathematics, Literature in English, Islamic Knowledge and Geography. Also, he did not sit for Economics and Biology.
Justice Musa had directed WAEC to produce Adeleke’s results in a ruling on an ex parte application by two plaintiffs, Messrs Wahab Raheem and Adam Habeeb.
He had in the ruling specifically ordered the examination body to produce in court the ledger containing results of Ademola and his mates with whom he sat for the examinations.
He also ordered WAEC to swear to an affidavit either denying or confirming that Adeleke, an incumbent Senator representing Osun West Senatorial District in the Senate, sat for the Council’s May/June 1981 examinations conducted by the Council at Ede Muslim High School in Ede, Osun State.
The court ordered that WAEC should file the ledger and the verifying affidavits within five days of being served with the enrolled order.
The court also ordered both the PDP and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to show cause within five days from the day of service of the originating summons” why they should not be stopped from recognising Adeleke’s candidacy.
Adeleke who is the candidate of the PDP in the governorship poll has been accused of forging his WAEC certificate.
But the Senator has since denied the allegation which he said was a lie being peddled by his political detractors.
However, in an affidavit deposed to by the Deputy Registrar/Head of School Examination Department, WAEC, Henry Sunday Adewunmi Osindeinde, and filed in response to the court’s September 11 ruling, the examination body confirmed that Adeleke sat for the May/June 1981 at Ede Muslim High School, Yidi Road, Ede.
Osideinde stated that the examination centre number was 19645 while Adeleke’s number as a candidate in the centre was 149.
WAEC attached a copy of the results of all 221 candidates that sat for the May/June 1981 in the centre at Ede Muslim High School.
Osindeinde said in the affidavit that: “By virtue of my position as Deputy Registrar/Head of School Examination Department, I have read the enrolled order of this court (specifically orders iv, v and vi) dated 11th September 2018 directing and compelling the WAEC to depose to an affidavit confirming or denying the said orders contained in the said enrolled order and referred to in this paragraph And I wish to state as follows:
“The said candidate named in this suit known as Adeleke Ademola, with Centre Number 19645 and Candidate Number 149, indeed sat for the Senior Secondary School Certificate Examination in May/June 1981 conducted by the council at Ede Muslim High School situate at P. O. Box 6 Yidi Road, Ede, State of Osun.
“The copy of the result listing referred to by the court order as the ledger containing the results of all the candidates (001 – 221) who sat for the Senior Secondary School Certificate Examination in the said school is hereby certified, attached and marked: Exhibit WA1.”
Adeleke is yet to file any response to the case.
The plaintiffs’ had contended in the suit that Adeleke’s claim that he sat for the Senior Secondary School Certificate Examination in May/June 1981 could not be true because Secondary School Certificate Examination had not been introduced then.
They argued that what was in existence then was the West African School Certificate Examination.
Justice Musa had fixed Wednesday for hearing in the case, but the court did not sit as the judge was said to be away on an official assignment.
The plaintiffs’ lawyer, Bankole Komolafe and the counsel to Adeleke, Nathaniel Oke, SAN, mutually agreed with court officials that the matter be adjourned till Thursday, September 25./ The Punch
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