Three years after the controversy surrounding her falsified Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination (UTME) result, Anambra student Ejikeme Mmesoma is set to regain eligibility to sit for the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) examination as the three-year ban imposed on her expires this July.
Mmesoma became a national figure in July 2023 after publicly claiming she scored 362 in the UTME, a mark that would have placed her among Nigeria’s top-performing candidates. She initially accused JAMB of refusing to acknowledge her result, sparking widespread public sympathy.
However, JAMB later declared the result fake, insisting that her authentic score was 249. The examination body alleged that she manipulated her result using a mobile phone before printing a forged copy at a cybercafé.
According to JAMB, the forged result slip contained several inconsistencies, including discrepancies in her registration number, date of birth, examination centre, and the use of an outdated notification template that had been discontinued since 2021.
Although Mmesoma initially denied wrongdoing and maintained that she printed the result directly from JAMB’s portal, the Anambra State Government set up an independent panel to investigate the matter.
The panel, led by Prof. Nkemdili Nnonyelu, interviewed JAMB officials, Mmesoma, her school authorities and other stakeholders. Its report, released on July 8, 2023, confirmed that her genuine UTME score was 249 and that the 362 score had been deliberately manipulated.
The panel further revealed that Mmesoma admitted altering the result on her Airtel mobile phone before printing it at a cybercafé. She also apologised to JAMB, the Anambra State Government and her school for her actions.
Following the findings, JAMB withdrew her 2023 UTME result and imposed a three-year ban from participating in its examinations, describing the sanction as consistent with its regulations on examination malpractice and result falsification.
The incident also had wider consequences. Innoson Vehicle Manufacturing withdrew the scholarship earlier awarded to her based on the false score, while her father, Romanus Ejikeme, publicly apologised to JAMB and Nigerians, admitting that his daughter failed to tell him the truth from the outset.
Anambra State Governor Chukwuma Soludo also directed that she undergo three months of psychotherapy and counselling.
The case generated nationwide debate, with education stakeholders, civil society organisations and political leaders expressing differing opinions. While some initially criticised JAMB’s handling of the matter, many accepted the board’s position after Mmesoma admitted to manipulating the result before the state investigative panel.
The House of Representatives had urged JAMB to suspend the implementation of the ban pending investigations, while former Minister of Education Oby Ezekwesili and former Minister of Aviation Osita Chidoka appealed for compassion, counselling and rehabilitation rather than public condemnation.
With the expiration of the three-year sanction, Mmesoma is now eligible once again to register for the UTME if she chooses to pursue admission into a Nigerian tertiary institution.
Her case remains one of Nigeria’s most notable examination fraud incidents and continues to serv












































































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