President Goodluck Jonathan
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Based on PREMIUM TIMES reports, the University of Port Harcourt has
declined a Freedom of Information, FOI, request for the doctorate degree
records of President Goodluck Jonathan.
In a response to the Institute of
Human Rights and Humanitarian Law, a Rivers State-based civil society
organization, the university said a request for President Jonathan’s academic
records did not fall within the provisions of the FOI law.
The report continues:
“The Management of the University
has carefully considered your request vis-a-vis the FOI Act,” the university
stated in their letter dated 26th February, 2015, and signed by Eric Loveday
Osuo Abonemi, the institution’s Legal Officer.
“It is my instructions to inform you
that your request does not come within the relevant provisions of the FOI Act
for its practicability or for the University to provide such details as
requested.
“Details of the Ph.D Degree of
President Goodluck Jonathan in the University of Port Harcourt cannot therefore
be made available to you.”
The Institute of Human Rights and
Humanitarian Law (IHRHL) had filed an FOI request, three weeks ago, to the
university seeking relevant details of Mr. Jonathan’s doctorate qualifications.
The letter requested the following
information relating to the president’s doctorate qualification, citing the
provisions of Sections 2 and 4 of the FOI Act, 2011:
- The title of the president’s doctorate dissertation
- Year of registration as a doctorate candidate
- Name of his doctorate supervisor(s)
- Name of his external examiner(s)
- Comments/reports of the external examiner of the dissertation/thesis
- Photocopy of the dissertation/thesis
- Date of graduation from the university
The organization said it was willing
to bear any cost the university might incur in making photocopies of the
requested documents and for posting them.
President Jonathan was admitted into
the Department of Zoology (now renamed Animal and Environmental Biology),
University of Port Harcourt, in 1977, where he graduated with Second Class
Honours (Upper Division).
In 1985, Mr. Jonathan obtained a
Master of Science degree in Hydrobiology and Fisheries, and a Doctor of
Philosophy degree in Zoology 10 years later.
Both degrees were also from the
University of Port Harcourt.
Lately, Mr. Jonathan’s academic
qualifications have come under increased scrutiny ahead of the forthcoming
general elections. Critics have accused the president of failing to complete
his doctorate programme.
In a response to an enquiry by Punch
Newspaper in January, the university dismissed such claims as having “neither
legs nor grounds to stand on”.
The university had also told any
person or organization seeking additional information on Mr. Jonathan’s
qualifications to contact the school authorities.
“We have absolutely nothing to hide
as an institution that has a statutory mandate to advance the frontiers of
knowledge,” William Wodi, the university’s Deputy Registrar (Information), had
told the newspaper.
It is unclear why the university declined
to release Mr. Jonathan’s academic qualifications to the civil society
organization after giving that commitment.
Jiti Ogunye, a Lagos-based lawyer,
said the president’s academic records ought to be freely available in the
university and not be “opaque or hidden”.
“The FOI is applicable to the
academic records of a public officer whose academic records are being requested
by a Nigerian citizen or a nongovernmental organization duly registered in
Nigeria with a view to promoting accountability and transparency in
government,” Mr. Ogunye said.
“The academic records of the
president are not the medical records of the president in which case a medical
officer can say the FOI is exempted, or the records between a lawyer and his
client which are covered by the confidentiality rule.”
WHAT THE FOI
ACT SAYS
According to Section 14(1) of the
FOI ACT, subject to subsection (2), a public institution must deny an
application for information that contains personal information and information
exempted under this subsection includes:
(a) files and personal information maintained with respect to clients, patients, residents, students, or other individuals receiving social, medical, educational, vocation, financial, supervisory or custodial care or services directly or indirectly from public institutions;…
(2) A public institution shall disclose any information that contains personal information if –
(a) the individual to whom it relates consents to the disclosure; or
(b) the information is publicly available
(3) Where disclosure of any information referred to in this section would be in the public interest, and if the public interest in the disclosure of such information clearly outweighs the protection of the privacy of the individual to whom such information relates, the public institution to whom request for disclosure is made shall disclose such information subject to Section 14(2) of this Act.
Mr. Ogunye said that an institution
might attempt to hide under Section 14(1)(a) to decline disclosure of
information.
“My argument is, this information is
publicly available and ought to be disclosed. The president has said he
obtained his Ph.D in that institution, so it’s publicly available,” Mr. Ogunye
said.
“So why will an institution refuse to disclose
an information that is publicly available? The university has acted wrongly and
can be compelled by the suit of the non-governmental organization concerned to
disclose the information.”
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