The Police Service Commission (PSC) has scheduled March 9 – March 18 for physical and credential screening of candidates who successfully completed the online registration for the ongoing recruitment of 50,000 constables into the Nigeria Police Force.
This was disclosed in a statement issued in Abuja on Tuesday by the spokesman of the Police Service Commission (PSC), Mr. Torty Njoku Kalu.
According to the statement, applicants are required to log on to the recruitment portal (npfapplication.psc.gov.ng) to check their status and print the necessary documents, which must be presented at the screening venue on the date and time specified in their Invitation Slip.
The required documents include:
Guarantors Form
Application Submission Slip
Invitation Slip
Credentials Screening Form
Physical Screening Form
The Commission further listed items to be presented at the screening venue as follows:
Invitation Slip (with assigned table)
Credential Screening Form
Original National Identity Number (NIN) printout or card issued by NIMC
O’ Level (GCE/SSCE) Certificate
Birth Certificate or Declaration of Age
LGA/State of Origin Certificate
Trade Test/Certificate (for Specialists only)
Duly completed and signed Guarantors Form, with photocopies and passport photographs of referees attached
Original and duplicate copies of credentials, neatly packaged in two separate white flat files with recent passport photographs attached
Applicants are also required to appear at their respective screening centres dressed in white canvas shoes, white T-shirts, white shorts, and white stockings.
The screening exercise will be conducted at designated locations within each state and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), as indicated on applicants’ invitation slips.
The Chairman of the Commission, Hashimu Salihu Argungu (rtd), reiterated that the recruitment exercise is entirely free of charge and does not require any form of payment.
He assured that the process would be conducted with transparency and accountability, while advising applicants to beware of impostors and scammers seeking to exploit the exercise.
Argungu warned that anyone found attempting to defraud applicants would be arrested and prosecuted.