Education News

6 out of 10 University Students Involved In ‘Yahoo Yahoo’ — EFCC Chair, Olukoyede 

 

 

By Olumuyiwa Olumuyiwa

 

The Executive Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Olanipekun Olukoyede, has disclosed a disturbing trend among the educated youth demographics in the country noting that  about six out of every 10 students in Nigerian universities are involved  internet fraud and related crimes known in popular parlance as “Yahoo Yahoo”.

 

 

Olukoyede made the disclosure at the 8th Biennial Conference of the Committee of Pro-Chancellors of State-Owned Universities in Nigeria held in Kano, themed “Unlocking the Potential of Artificial Intelligence: University Governance, Internationalization and Rankings”.

 

“My research in the last one year has shown that about six out of 10 students in our universities are into cybercrime. It is a very disturbing situation,” he said.

 

He disclosed that many of those arrested in recent cybercrime operations were students, adding that some had even compromised the integrity of the academic system by allegedly placing lecturers on their payroll.

 

According to him, the situation reflects deeper systemic challenges, including weak oversight and vulnerabilities within university administration.

 

Olukayode also cited a major operation in Lagos where 792 suspects linked to a transnational cybercrime syndicate were arrested, noting that a significant number of them were students.

 

He said the operation, powered by artificial intelligence tools, exposed the scale and sophistication of cybercrime networks operating within and beyond Nigeria.

 

The EFCC chairman further expressed concern over the growing trend of “Yahoo Plus,” where suspects combine internet fraud with fetish practices.

 

He called on university authorities and governing councils to take urgent steps to curb the menace, including strengthening institutional controls and collaborating with law enforcement agencies.

 

Olukayode urged pro-chancellors to establish AI-driven governance systems to enhance transparency, detect fraud and improve financial accountability in universities.

 

He noted that most tertiary institutions still rely heavily on manual systems, making them vulnerable to fraud such as ghost workers, inflated contracts and diversion of funds.

 

“A university that lacks financial accountability cannot credibly train future professionals. The integrity of our universities is a matter of national security,” he said.

 

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