Nigeria at a Crossways: Education Reforms, Health Warnings, Political Alliances, and Solar Power Gains
As
Nigeria edges into the second half of 2025, the country finds itself at a
pivotal intersection of reform, reckoning, and renewal, from sweeping policy
changes in the education sector to bold moves in healthcare, politics, and
renewable energy.
Government Cracks Down on Illegal
University Admissions
In a
decisive move to restore order and transparency in Nigeria’s tertiary education
sector, the Federal Government has set the minimum admission age at 16 years and warned
that any admissions outside the Central Admissions
Processing System (CAPS) will now be
deemed illegal.
The announcement, made during the 2025 JAMB Policy Meeting, spells serious consequences for violators, including license revocation and prosecution. With over 120 universities receiving fewer than 50 applications this year, the crackdown has ignited a broader conversation around access, relevance, and regulation in the country’s rapidly expanding academic landscape.