With opponents of
presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, Muhammadu
Buhari, still questioning the authenticity of a secondary school
certificate that was released a few days ago, the University of
Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate (UCLES), now known as Cambridge
Assessment, has confirmed that Hausa language was one of the set
subjects offered in 1961.
Cambridge Assessment made the
disclosure in response to an email inquiry asking the agency to
authenticate the secondary school certificate result for Mr. Buhari that
was released by Government College Katsina. In an email to our
correspondent, Cambridge Assessment declined to disclose the APC
candidate’s personal records, stating that the agency responds only to
requests that emanate directly from exam candidates. “This is in
accordance with the provisions of the Data Protection Act 1998 and
section 40 of the Freedom of Information Act 2000,” the agency
explained.
Cambridge Assessment was
responsible for conducting secondary school leaving certificate exams in
the 1960s. The agency was the precursor of the West African Examination
Council (WAEC) that today awards the General Certificate of Education
to students who pass their secondary school certificate exams.
SaharaReporters had written to
Cambridge Assessment amid allegations and insinuations by hordes of Mr.
Buhari’s critics, including officials of the ruling Peoples Democratic
Party and online commentators, that the certificate results released by
the APC presidential candidate were questionable. Since Mr. Buhari asked
his secondary school to release his results to the public early this
week, several persons, including one A.A. Adeyinka, a professor of
educational foundations at the University of Ilorin, had claimed that
Hausa was not offered as a subject in WASC exams until the 1970s.
In their email to
SaharaReporters, Cambridge Assessment made it clear that “Hausa” was
offered as a subject in their exams in 1961. The agency’s statement
“confirmed that, according to the Regulations for 1961, African language
papers, including those for Hausa, were set for the West African School
Certificate.”


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