Peter Obi Demands Prosecution of Tinubu’s Minister Amid Shocking Certificate Forgery Report

The New Diplomat
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By Abiola Olawale

The 2023 presidential candidate of the Labour Party, Peter Obi, has demanded the immediate prosecution of a minister in President Bola Tinubu’s cabinet.

The call comes on the heels of a damning investigative report accusing the Minister of Science, Technology, and Innovation, Uche Nnaji of alleged certificate fraud.

The report alleged that the minister submitted falsified academic credentials during his ministerial nomination.

The investigative report also revealed that the University of Nigeria, Nsukka. has purportedly disowned the Bachelor of Science degree certificate in the possession of Nnaji, saying the politician did not complete his studies at the institution and was never issued a certificate.

Citing court documents filed before Justice Hauwa Yilwa of the Federal High Court in Abuja, the report claimed that Nnaji also admitted that UNN never issued him a degree certificate.

It said the minister instituted a suit against the Minister of Education, the National Universities Commission (NUC), the University of Nigeria, its Vice-Chancellor, Professor Simon Ortuanya, the Registrar, a former Acting Vice-Chancellor, Professor Oguejiofor Ujam, and the university’s Senate.

Reacting to the report in a statement, Obi said those who “are supposed to be exemplary” have become “the very source of the nation’s decay.”

He warned that when dishonest behaviour is modelled by public officials, it corrodes the moral standards available to young Nigerians.

Obi stated: “But in my country Nigeria, though the laws are same as in other countries, that forgery is punished by immediate disqualification, the Independent National Electoral Commission makes no effort to scrutinize certificates before the elections, over looks complaints of forgery and when you challenged after the elections, court will dismiss the serious criminal issues as ‘pre-election matters’ without giving this criminal act appropriate punishment.

“INEC, even after the elections, does not bother to revisit or investigate these serious offences before the next election.

“The other concerning issue from all these is how criminals and dishonest people scale through all the scrutiny layers -security, parliament, and government apparatus set to handle such.

“Even more disturbing, amounting to double tragedy, is that most of these dishonest people swore to an affidavit before a law court attesting to the authenticity of the documents they presented.

“We are now preparing for the 2027 general elections. INEC has enough time to investigate past complaints about various forms of forgery and false claims.

“Our Electoral amendments must include that anyone intending to contest for any public office, whether an incumbent or a new candidate, must submit all academic certificates to the electoral body immediately after party primaries, at least six months before the election.

“These certificates, alongside details of schools attended, what was studied, and years of study, should be made public for verification within 90 days.

“This process must also apply to appointed officials, Ministers, and even aides, because when dishonesty starts from the top, it spreads to every level of governance, just like it’s happening now.”

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