Audio By Carbonatix
Nigeria's interior minister has rejected calls for him to step down after he blamed job-seekers for their deaths in Saturday's stampede.
At least seven people died after tens of thousands turned up to take a test for fewer than 5,000 positions.
Abba Moro told the BBC that there had been "poor handling" of the event by officials but also said those in the crowd should have been more patient.
He said his resignation "did not arise" until after an investigation.
Mr Moro told the BBC's Newsday programme that "unauthorised" people had broken through the fence into the national stadium in the capital, Abuja, where the tests were being held, causing the stampede.
Similar statements over the weekend had led to calls for him to resign.
Although he said he accepted responsibility, as only one stadium entrance was open at the time, he said he would not step down.
One of the applicants, Mohammed Yusuf, told Newsday he saw two people crushed to death in front of him, saying it was "very terrible".
He blamed the officials in charge of the stadium for the deaths, saying that more than one gate should have been opened.
Applicants had to pay 1,000 naira ($6; £3.5) to take the test. Mr Moro said this would not be refunded.
The recruitment exercise was for jobs in the immigration department. There is a high level of unemployment in Nigeria especially among young people. In 2011, it stood at 23.9%.
Latest Stories
-
Akatsi South records gains in health, education, revenue mobilisation – MCE
3 minutes -
NDPC Chair calls for harmony in national development planning
3 minutes -
Be agents of change, not just title holders – NYA CEO Osman Ayariga urges youth
5 minutes -
Agyemang-Prempeh supports Tepa Hospital with equipment, pledges to tackle challenges
7 minutes -
Recent stability in exchange rate creating a healthy business environment – GUTA
7 minutes -
Ghana has moved from managing crisis to managing recovery—Prof. Gyeke-Dako
11 minutes -
Health tutors demand better conditions of service, legal backing at national AGM
14 minutes -
Current economic stability healthy for businesses – GUTA
16 minutes -
Reading the World Bank Cocoa Forecast Correctly: The floor is already here
24 minutes -
Job creation remains weakest link in economic recovery, says Joe Jackson
27 minutes -
Macro turnaround clear, but market reality still tough — Finance Ministry
32 minutes -
CAF endorses Gianni Infantino for third presidential term at FIFA
42 minutes -
Clifford Braimah eyes Savannah NPP chairmanship, launches grassroots tour
45 minutes -
Vincent Ekow Assafuah slams gov’t over ‘u-turn’ on Ghana School of Law entrance exams
50 minutes -
John Jinapor showing strong leadership on power outages, deserves support – Prof Beyuo
1 hour