Anti-Corruption Agency Sends Its Officials To Monitor Students' Exams In the Republic of Niger, the anti-corruption commission has said...
Anti-Corruption Agency Sends Its Officials To Monitor Students' Exams
In the Republic of Niger, the anti-corruption commission has said that it has sent its officers to other parts of the country to make sure there is no cheating on the exams that the students in the final class of secondary schools in the first level will start taking tomorrow, June 13, 2023.
In the past, the agency that fought corruption arrested students, teachers, and even some leaders of test centers who had stolen materials or tried to steal them. The last time this happened, someone sang during the 2022 secondary school tests, so she told the people involved not to do anything that looks like lying.
In the past, it was hard for poor people to take school exams or apply for government jobs because they couldn't find a place to live. Because of this, the government of Niger set up a system where officials from the anti-corruption commission go to the exam centers to make sure everyone is honest. As a result of this action, the government gave the agency the right to get involved in the problems of detention in the context of the trials that will be held in this country to make sure that the matter is started from the ground up.
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The government of Niger has given the board approval to help plan all the exams that will be given in the country. This is to stop the parents of students from complaining that the exams are being stolen.
Because of the anti-corruption commission's involvement in a series of exams in Niger over the past two years, the country's leaders have given the HALCIA commission permission to keep an eye on the effects of future exams. This is why the agency has sent its officers to the Brevet exam centers for the last class of secondary schools in the first level, which starts on Tuesday, June 13.
People's development groups like Voix des sans Voix, according to its president Alhaji Nassirou Saidou, see the choice as a way to give every student the chance to have the same luck as all his peers.

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