Audio By Carbonatix
Investigations by Education Think Tank, Africa Education Watch have revealed that question papers for the 2020 West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) were leaked to candidates.
According to Executive Director of Africa Education Watch, Kofi Asare, these question papers were sent from West African Examinations Council's (WAEC) IT department to other online platforms which were subsequently forwarded to his outfit by a member on the platform.
He stated that a day after his outfit hinted WAEC that the papers were leaked directly from their headquarters, WAEC indicated that it had commenced investigations into the matter. However WAEC has failed to brief Africa Education Watch on the outcome of the investigations.
“WAEC confirmed the day after we blew the cover that indeed it had leaked from their headquarters and that they had instituted an internal inquiry. 10 months after the leakage, no one has informed us about the outcome of such an inquiry and whether it happened at all.
“But it leaked from the WAEC’s own IT department and it leaked unto a platform which was eventually forwarded to our assessment team by a member of that particular platform," he added.
Speaking to JoyNews' Evans Mensah on NewsNite, Wednesday, Mr Asare alleged that the leaked information contained the names, email addresses, telephone numbers of examiners.
"But WAEC immediately after the leakage held a press conference, met the media and assured them that particular list was a provisional list and that they had about 20,000 markers or examiners and so the 1,520 could not have… only to turn around and use the same 1,520 examiners to mark the papers.
"If you go to the UK’s regulator, which is the office of qualification assessment. Their standards include among others a non-disclosure of the contact details of external examiners and markers so that particular action by WAEC fell short of WAEC’s own standard," he added.
The Executive Director at Africa Education Watch noted that during a discussion concerning the report conducted by his outfit, the Minister of Education, Dr Yaw Adutwum stated that the government is committed to reform the assessment sector and make it more credible, hence prevent such from occurring in the future.
Latest Stories
-
England are tough, but we can play against Ghana, Panama – Croatia coach reacts to World Cup draw
31 minutes -
We can beat anyone – Otto Addo reacts to World Cup draw
47 minutes -
GPL 2025/26: Mensah brace fires All Blacks to victory over Eleven Wonders
2 hours -
This Saturday on Newsfile: Petitions against the OSP, EC heads, and 2025 WASSCE results
2 hours -
Ambassador urges U.S. investors to prioritise land verification as Ghana courts more investment
3 hours -
Europe faces an expanding corruption crisis
3 hours -
Ghana’s Dr Bernard Appiah appointed to WHO Technical Advisory Group on alcohol and drug epidemiology
3 hours -
2026 World Cup: Ghana drawn against England, Croatia and Panama in Group L
4 hours -
3 dead, 6 injured in Kpando–Aziave road crash
4 hours -
Lightwave eHealth accuses Health Ministry of ‘fault-finding’ and engaging competitor to audit its work
4 hours -
Ayewa Festival ignites Farmers Day with culture, flavour, and a promise of bigger things ahead
4 hours -
Government to deploy 60,000 surveillance cameras nationwide to tackle cybercrime
4 hours -
Ghana DJ Awards begins 365-day countdown to 2026 event
4 hours -
Making Private University Charters Optional in Ghana: Implications and Opportunities
4 hours -
Mampong tragedy: Students among 30 injured as curve crash kills three
4 hours
