HomeNewsBayero University expels 171 students for falsifying credentials

Bayero University expels 171 students for falsifying credentials

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KEY POINTS


  • BUK’s Senate approved the expulsion of 171 students for falsifying admission entry qualifications.
  • A civil engineering student also faces expulsion for physically assaulting examination invigilators.
  • The university cites Section 20.7 of its General Examinations and Academic Regulations as the basis for the action.

Bayero University Kano has expelled 171 students after an investigation found they falsified the credentials they submitted during their admission process, making it one of the most significant disciplinary actions the institution has taken against academic fraud in recent years.

The Bayero University Kano expulsion decision came at the university’s 433rd Senate meeting on March 4, 2026, following a review by the Senate Committee on Entry Qualification Irregularities. According to the university’s weekly bulletin, the affected students came from different departments and levels across the institution, suggesting the falsification extended well beyond a single faculty or admissions cycle.

Assault on invigilators adds to the disciplinary picture

The university grounded the action in Section 20.7, Category A (vii) of its General Examinations and Academic Regulations, which specifically prescribes expulsion for this category of misconduct. In its statement, management described the mass expulsion as part of a broader effort to clean up its academic records and send an unambiguous message to current and future students.

Beyond the credential falsification cases, the Senate also approved the separate expulsion of Yusuf Muhammad Sani, a student from the Department of Civil Engineering. His case involved physical assault on invigilators during an examination, an incident that disrupted the conduct of the exam and put him in direct violation of the university’s student discipline regulations.

University reaffirms zero-tolerance stance

In its statement, BUK management stressed that the Bayero University Kano expulsion action was not an isolated event but a statement of institutional policy. “This mass expulsion serves as a stern warning to current and prospective students of the institution that BUK maintains a zero-tolerance policy toward both academic fraud and indiscipline,” the statement read.

Furthermore, management made clear that future violations would attract similarly strict consequences regardless of the level or department of the student involved. For an institution that has consistently emphasised academic integrity, the scale of the March 4 decision underlines how seriously the university treats the validity of its own admissions process.

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