Minister of Secondary Education, Prof. Pauline Nalova Lyonga, has declared the urgent need to completely modernize and digitize the Cameroon GCE Board. This call to action follows a major security breach that resulted in leaked exam questions on social media, forcing the rescheduling of the 2026 written session.
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 The minister during a media briefing blamed the crisis on systemic failures and “internal betrayal” within the GCE Board, noting that candidates accessed exam scripts up to a week before writing them.
 Prof. Nalova Lyonga stated that she will not tolerate an examination board lagging behind technologically.
The ministry is seeking to transition to more secure, computer-based testing, the Minister said, echoing recent strides made in other MINESEC sectors.
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To restore the integrity of the Anglo-Saxon examination, exams originally slated for June 8 to June 18 were pushed back, and will now run from June 22 to July 2, 2026.
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Further investigation into the situation is ongoing, as all physical and digital evidence of the leaks has been handed over to the police for a forensic investigation, Minister Nalova revealed.
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 Secondary Education Minister Blames Press Print and individuals at GCE Board.
Calling a spade a spade in Yaounde while speaking out on leaked GCE questions, Minister Pauline Nalova warned against warmongering or scapegoating that the leaks were orchestrated by ” Yaounde” to tarnish the image of the GCE Board or take back the Board.
 She squarely made it clear that the leaks were the handiwork of the GCE Board’s internal systemic failures and corruption within the Anglo-Saxon Educational Community.
She added that the leaks were an internal betrayal, noting that the GCE questions were leaked through institutions like ” Press Print” and handled by individuals directly involved with the GCE Board.
Investigations are going on and those linked with this shame will be sorted out and sanctioned
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