The Management of Ambrose Alli University, (AAU) Ekpoma, has denied social media allegations that it sells admission to candidates.
Head, Corporate Communications and Protocols, Otunba Mike Aladenika, described as baseless, a report that the university was engaged in the sales of admission to the highest bidders.
He described the report of the alleged admission racketeering “as a new generation-falsehood which should be dismissed and trashed in its entirety.
Aladenika made the rebuttal while speaking with newsmen in Benin on Saturday.
He said, “The uninvestigated and completely misguided and vengeful story could better be described as a poor job done for certain elements who are out for some mischief and image damage.
“It is a fact that provisional admissions were granted to students into our various departments and faculties as required by enabling laws guiding admission processes in the university.
“It is also a fact that upon this provisional admission, acceptance comes with specific payments after which you are expected to follow through with other requirements.
He said it is such requirements that enables candidates to register as bonafide students of the university.
He also pointed out that the process of admission is digital and seamless, causing no problems for candidates that followed through with the process online.
According to him, the process of admission begins with the acceptance of the provisional admission which needs to be completed on schedule, to allow for the university’s calender to be completely implemented.
“Some of these candidates, after accepting the provisional admission, failed to complete the process until the quota was filled.
“Nevertheless, the university, in its wisdom, had to reassign such candidates to other departments and faculties mostly their second choice.
“To meet up with the deadline for registration process, the university issued a reminder to students who had made acceptance that their process must be completed on or before August 14, 2023, to guarantee studentship eligiblity.
“To the best of my knowledge, the affected candidates are just about 20 in number for each of the courses in question, Law and Medical Laboratory Sciences(MLS).
“The number admitted into MLS is 88 in the desire of the university to meet admission quota, while that of law is 135.
“Who then is buying these admissions? And why must a small number of candidates who failed to meet admission timelines through their own faults and therefore missed the opportunity now hold the university to ransom?”
Aladenika noted that “the entire admission process, as driven by the acting vice chancellor, was electronically facilitated, devoid of marginal human errors.”
He also stressed that: “There is nobody given admission without meeting up with the expected academic requirements.”
He said, “Absolute merit was considered (you can come and verify that), not patronage.
“He who alleges must prove. Our hands are clean. Our actions are responsibe to the effect of its discharge.”
He explained that students who followed through with the process had almost concluded their registration.
“I will advise that if the candidates concerned are still interested in their studentship of the university, they should embrace their new departments and do the needful before the entire system is closed,” he said.