The University of Cambridge Local
Examinations Syndicate, UCLES, now Cambridge Assessment, has provided further
details on the West African School Certificate, WASC, results presented by
Muhammadu Buhari, the candidate of the All Progressives Candidate in the
February 14 presidential election.
In a new post on its website, the university
confirmed result grades for the examination in 1961 were issued in numbers, not
letters, as suggested by critics of Mr. Buhari who have dismissed the results
he presented as fabricated.
According to Cambridge, “Examination
results were classed in grades from 1 to 9”. “1, 2,3,4,5 & 6 indicate a Pass
with Credit; 7 & 8 indicate a Pass; 9 indicate a Failure,” the school said.
Results tendered by Mr. Buhari shows he had
credits in English Language, Geography, Health Science, Hausa Language; failed
in Mathematics and Woodwork, and had a pass in Literature in English.
In its post, Cambridge said for
candidates to qualify for its certificate in 1961, they needed to pass English,
and not necessarily Mathematics. “To pass the School Certificate, candidates
had to pass examinations in a variety of groups.
It was compulsory to pass English
Language, but not Maths, in order to gain the Certificate,” the university
said. The details followed intense controversy over whether Mr. Buhari, a
former Head of State and retired Army General, completed his secondary education.
The Nigerian constitution requires
any candidate running for the office of the President to have at least the
Senior Secondary School Certificate or its equivalent.
The ruling Peoples Democratic Party,
PDP, and the campaign office of President Goodluck Jonathan accuse Mr. Buhari
of lacking the requisite qualification for the office of the president. Mr.
Buhari, who ran for president in 2003, 2007 and 2011, repeatedly declared that
copies of his academic records were with the military.