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Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, has sounded a clear warning to students and the general public over a Facebook account falsely presenting itself as the Vice-Chancellor, Professor Ugochukwu Bond Stanley Anyachie.
The alert was issued in an official public notice dated 5 January 2026 by the university’s Information and Public Relations Office. According to the statement, an unknown individual created a Facebook page bearing the name Bond Anyachie and deliberately uploaded photographs of the Vice-Chancellor to deceive unsuspecting users.
The university did not mince words: the circulating Facebook page is not owned or operated by Professor Anyachie.
UNIZIK advised everyone who encounters messages, posts, or requests from the fake account to steer clear completely. No replies. No clicks. No curiosity.
Management further clarified that the Vice-Chancellor maintains only one authentic Facebook account, and that account is verified. Any other profile using his name or images should be treated as fraudulent without debate.
Why This Warning Is Serious Business
Fake accounts like this often go after students, dangling fake admissions help, fee-related messages, or imaginary favours. Once money or personal details are handed over, the damage is usually irreversible. This is how people get burned.
What UNIZIK Wants You To Do Immediately
The university is calling on the public to actively help shut the fake page down by reporting it directly to Facebook. Multiple reports increase the chances of swift removal.
The reporting steps, simplified:
1. Open the fake Facebook profile
2. Tap the three dots below the cover photo
3. Select Report profile
4. Choose Something about this profile
5. Pick Scam, fraud or false information or Fake profile
• If you select Fake profile, mark it as Public figure and include the Vice-Chancellor’s genuine profile details
6. Submit the report
It takes barely two minutes, but it can save someone else from serious trouble.
Stay Sharp, Stay Informed
UNIZIK emphasized that impersonation of university officials is becoming increasingly common because their positions carry authority. Leaving fake pages unchecked creates easy traps for innocent people.
The university urged students to spread the word—especially in class and departmental group chats—so no one gets caught off guard.
Management also expressed appreciation to those who have already reported the account and encouraged everyone to remain vigilant online.
Bottom line: social media is fast. Scammers are faster. Stay alert.
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