President
Muhammadu Buhari
|
The Presidency says
President Muhammadu Buhari has no certificate case hanging on his neck as being
insinuated in some quarters.
News
Agency of Nigeria report continues:
Garba
Shehu, the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to the President,
gave this clarification while reacting to the Sunday PUNCH newspaper
where the president was featured among prominent Nigerians the paper
alleges have certificate scandals.
Mr.
Shehu said the president was not in the category of Nigerian leaders with
questionable certificates.
He
enjoined the Punch editors to update their records to avoid making this
repeated mistake.
The
statement read: “In reaction to your cover story this morning Sunday, March 26,
2017, we wish to emphatically state that President Muhammadu Buhari does not
fit into your categorization of leaders with certificate scandals because he
bears none that is on available records.
“In
the course of the contest for the office of the President in 2015, a number of
wild, untrue and malicious allegations were made against him in order to stop
him from contesting for the office in the election.
“The
issue of certificates was raised against him but the campaign successfully
dealt with the allegations by providing evidence that not only was he qualified
to run, he had a far higher academic qualification than is required by the
constitution. As a result, he went on to run for the office and eventually won.
“Since
the purpose of the challenge was primarily to stop him from being a candidate
in that election, the challengers either voluntarily withdrew or abandoned the
cases soon after he won and all of them were subsequently struck off by the
courts.’’
The
presidential aide therefore maintained that president had no certificate case
hanging on his neck.
Prominent
Nigerians With Certificate Scandals
Prominent
Nigerians with certificate scandals
|
Like sea creatures in
ocean’s depth, prominent Nigerians have been grappling not to sink in the murky
waters of certificate scandals, Bayo
Akinloye writes
SUNDAY
PUNCH reports:
“I’ll
never resign!” his gentle voice echoed through his expansive office, as his
body shook like a man being led inevitably to the gallows as he addressed
journalists in a press conference.
The
grandeur of his office as the Speaker, House of Representatives, was
unmistakable with his retinue of security details and aides.
There
were five rooms adjoining and leading to his expansive official personal
office: the security details, receptionists, private secretaries, aides, chief
of staff and aid-de-camp.
As
the Number Four citizen of Nigeria, he could wield enormous power and would do
anything to remain in power – as he had already lied his way to become the
fourth most powerful person in the most populous black nation on earth.
The Ahmadu Bello
University connection
Erstwhile
Speaker of the House of Representatives, Salisu Buhari’s way to the lower
chamber of the National Assembly was fraught with forgeries. To become a
federal lawmaker, he claimed he was 36 years old as of 1999, though he was born
in 1970.
The
minimum required age to be a lawmaker in the House, according to the 1999
Nigerian Constitution, is 30.
He
also claimed to have attended University of Toronto in Canada and graduated
with a degree in Business Administration, but the university denied he was ever
a student of the institution.
And
for falsifying his credentials to gain admission into Ahmadu Bello University,
Zaria, Kaduna State, he was kicked out and never had the opportunity to
participate in the one-year National Youth Service Corps exercise.
In
2000, the lid was fully blown open and the defiant Buhari broke down in tears
of confession before the nation, owning up to allegations of forgery and
perjury.
“I
apologize to you. I apologize to the nation. I apologize to my family and
friends for all the distress I have caused them. I was misled in error by my
zeal to serve the nation. I hope the nation will forgive me and give me the
opportunity to serve again,” he begged.
Dino Melaye
To
date, Salisu Buhari has remained the poster boy of certificate scandal in
the country’s political space, with the latest accusation levelled against a
one-time anti-corruption activist and now senator, Dino Melaye.
Forty-three-year-old
Melaye, bald-headed with a well-tended moustache to boot, was accused by an
online news medium, SaharaReporters of
not graduating from the same ABU. One of his colleagues, Senator Ali Ndume,
called for the upper legislative chamber to probe him for forgery and perjury.
“SaharaReporters, please sue me and ABU
if it is true that I did not graduate from Zaria. Tell (the Acting Chairman of
the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission) Magu (Ibrahim) to arrest and
prosecute me. I’m presently a student of ABU pursuing my seventh degree,”
Melaye retorted.
However,
Harvard University and the London School of Economics and Political Science,
which Melaye had reportedly claimed to have graduated from, told SaharaReporters that Melaye did not
study degree courses with them, and hence, couldn’t have graduated.
As
it is customary, the Senate has referred Melaye’s case to the Committee on
Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions. The committee’s report is expected to
come in towards the end of April.
Just
a fortnight ago, the firebrand politician was breathing fire and brimstone,
hankering that Magu’s confirmation should be dismissed because he did not pass
the Senate’s “integrity test.”
But
the spokesman for northern delegates in the last National Conference, Anthony
Sani, does not think it is a problem peculiar to politically exposed persons.
“Certificate
scandal is not an exclusive preserve of politicians but manifestations of
corrupt practices that have distorted our sense of what is right and what is
evil in the polity. Consider the prevalence of exam malpractices, among our
youths in order to have realistic appreciation of the unsavoury situation,” he
told SUNDAY PUNCH.
A
scandal that rocks even presidents
In
an animated manner, Sani dismissed an allegation that President Muhammadu
Buhari did not have a certificate to show that he finished his secondary school
education. He had told SUNDAY PUNCH in 2015 that it was an insult to
say the man – a general – that would soon be the nation’s president did not
have such a certificate.
Even
though the respected former Chief of Defence Staff, Lt. Gen. Alani Akinrinade
(retd.), in defence of President Buhari, had expressed disdain for those who
accused the President of not having the Cambridge West African School
Certificate Ordinary Level in 1961 as he claimed, the allegation left a chink
in the armour of Buhari than any other issue as the 73-year-old has yet to
present the certificate.
Few
months to the 2015 presidential poll, Buhari defended himself, saying that he
attended the Provincial Secondary School, Katsina, with many prominent
Nigerians, including the late General Shehu Yar’Adua.
Certain
of not forging his certificate, Buhari said he sat for the University of
Cambridge/WASSCE Examination in 1961, with the examination number 8280002,
which he reportedly passed in the Second Division.
He
also submitted an affidavit to the Independent National Electoral Commission
that all his academic credentials were with the Military Board. However, the
army issued a curious disclaimer that it did not have the original, certified
true copy or statement of results of the retired general.
In
the ensuing claim and counterclaim, one Nnamdi Nwokocha-Ahaaiwe instituted a
lawsuit asking the court to disqualify Buhari from running for president
because he did not have the minimum qualification required to contest for the
presidential election.
There
was raucous noise across the nation as opponents and supporters awaited the
court’s pronouncement but before the case could be decided, the former head of
state won the election and was sworn in as a democratically elected president.
On
June 16, 2016, a Federal High Court in Abuja adjourned the suit indefinitely
seemingly putting an end to a nail-biting controversy that may be forever
associated with a president who built his claim to the presidency on the
platform of integrity.
Goodluck Jonathan
But
before Buhari was subjected to this scrutiny, former President Goodluck
Jonathan had also been caught momentarily in the web of a certificate
scandal.
Like
a salvo, ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo hauled a bombshell that must have
unsettled and rattled the leadership of the PDP and others who revered Jonathan
and never ceased to laud him as the first doctoral degree holder to lead
Nigeria.
Obasanjo
had said, “Even Jonathan did not finish his PhD course but when it was
presented, we stated that it does not matter but many people did not know
because it was a PDP thing.”
Coming
from arguably Nigeria’s most respected leader and global statesman, the
accusation was weighty and left the sitting president’s integrity and image in
a precarious state.
Jonathan
reportedly holds a BSc in Zoology with second class honours; an MSc in
Hydrobiology and Fisheries Biology; and a PhD in Zoology, all from the
University of Port Harcourt, Rivers State.
His
supporters felt Obasanjo was making desperate efforts to discredit the then
president ahead of the 2015 presidential poll to ensure he would not win the
election.
In
a response to an inquiry by The PUNCH, the university had dismissed
such accusation as having “neither legs nor grounds to stand on.”
The
institution, through its Deputy Registrar, William Wodi, had said concerning
information on Jonathan’s qualifications, “We have absolutely nothing to hide
as an institution that has a statutory mandate to advance the frontiers of
knowledge.”
Yet,
when civil society organisation, Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian
Law, requested for Jonathan’s academic records through the Freedom of
Information law, the university replied, “The Management of the university has
carefully considered your request vis-a-vis the FOI Act.
“It
is my instruction 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 PhD Degree of President
Goodluck Jonathan in the University of Port Harcourt cannot therefore be made
available to you.”
That
put paid to Obasanjo’s accusation.
Asiwaju Bola Tinubu
Since
1999, only few men have bestridden Nigeria’s political landscape like a
colossus as the current National Leader of the All Progressives Congress. As
the ultimate kingmaker, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, has anointed governors and
frustrated the ambitions of those who would not kowtow to his political vision.
A
formidable political fighter and strategist, loved by many and hated by as
much, the allegation that he forged a certificate may always dog the APC
leader.
In
1999, one Dr. Waliu Balogun had written a petition against Tinubu that he did
not attend Chicago State University as indicated in his INEC form 001 filled
when he contested the Lagos State governorship poll and that he also lied in
the affidavit he attached to the INEC form, in which he declared that he lost
his university degree certificate while he was in exile between 1994 and 1998.
Balogun’s
litany of complaints included accusations that Tinubu’s claim of attending
Government College, Ibadan, was false; and that he lied in the INEC form about
his age – that he was born in 1952 as against the 1954 he filled in the
documents at the Chicago university. Tinubu was also accused of not
participating in the compulsory one-year NYSC exercise.
Generating
a lot of furore, Tinubu was forced to present the original copy of his
certificate while he dismissed the allegations as “baseless, wicked and
unfortunate.”
Notwithstanding,
that year, a firebrand lawyer and human rights activist, Gani Fawehinmi, went
to court to compel the Inspector General of Police to investigate Tinubu.
Fawehinmi did not live long enough to finish the lawsuit.
In
2013, however, one Dr. Dominic Adegbola filed an unsuccessful application
seeking to reopen the suit.
Ayodele Fayose
Ekiti
State Governor, Ayodele Fayose, means many things to many people. Some hail him
as a courageous politician daring the APC-led Federal Government. Others see
him as an impostor using populism to take advantage of the Ekiti people – this
is partly based on a 2013 certificate scandal that he was embroiled in.
Flamboyant
Fayose had claimed that he attended The Polytechnic, Ibadan and bagged a Higher
National Diploma certificate but he was left in a state of disbelief when the
institution issued a disclaimer that he was never a student of the polytechnic
and that the certificate he claimed as his actually belonged to a different
person.
Not
a few people asked for his prosecution just as Fayose prepared for the
governorship election.
In
an intriguing volte-face, the state polytechnic ate their words, admitting that
Fayose was a graduate of the school and he eventually won the election in
October 2014 on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party.
Gabriel Suswam
With
chubby cheeks and usually wearing a smile, former two-time Governor of Benue
State, Gabriel Suswam was accused of forging his West African School
Certificate which he used to gain admission to the University of Lagos to study
Law.
Ahead
of the 2007 governorship poll in Benue, Suswam submitted the certificate to
INEC as prerequisite to contest in the election.
No
sooner had he done that than it was alleged that his original certificate
showed that he passed five subjects, excluding Mathematics and English, which
are mandatory for admission into a Nigerian university.
His
accusers also accused Suswam of writing to WAEC in 2005 claiming that his
certificate was missing, attaching photocopies of the missing certificate, a
police report and an affidavit of loss of certificate to the letter.
A
PDP aspirant and opponent of Suswam, Terver Kakih, took the matter to court
claiming that WAEC issued the accused a new certificate that indicated he
passed English and Mathematics, raising suspicions it might have been forged.
The
case literally dragged from that point until Suswam completed his tenure as
governor with the examination body standing by the certificate it issued
Suswam.
The
lawsuit moved from the High Court to the Supreme Court and in 2014, the apex
court cleared Suswam of any wrongdoing.
Adams Oshiomhole
For
many a Nigerian governor, unease lies the head that wears the crown. Like his
colleagues mentioned earlier, former Edo State Governor, Adams Oshiomhole, also
walked the often tight rope of a forgery scandal in 2012 when Major General
Charles Airhiavbere (retd.) challenged the authenticity of his academic
records.
Airhiavbere,
who was contesting governorship on the platform of PDP, had said Oshiomhole’s
primary and school certificates were forged.
In
a case that went before elections tribunal, Airhiavbere argued that all
certificates presented to INEC by Oshiomhole were not authentic.
According
to him, Oshiomhole attended Iyamoh Primary School, Iyamoh, from 1957 to 1962,
with Edo State Ministry of Education’s record indicating that the school was
founded in 1963, a year after the then governor said he graduated from it; and
that his name was not listed among graduands of Blessed Martins Secondary
Modern School, which Oshiomhole was said to have graduated from in 1965, among
other issues.
Though
Airhiavbere lost his case at the tribunal, he got a reprieve at the Court of
Appeal, as the court ordered that a new tribunal should be convened to revisit
the petition he had earlier filed.
As
time fled past, what used to be a legal tussle between Oshiomhole and the
retired general turned into a case of camaraderie because in 2015 during the
former’s seventh anniversary as governor, Airhiavbere praised him, saying, “The
platform created by Oshiomhole is strong and tenable and one upon which the APC
as a party should allow all aspirants to contest to fly the party’s flag in the
2016 governorship election. The governor’s crowd of supporters and the
relevance of the party in the state have been deep-rooted even in opposition,
before that election.”
Godwin Obaseki
Edo
State Governor, Godwin Obaseki, succeeded Oshiomhole in running the affairs of
the state. He is also like his predecessor in another sense.
Obaseki’s
profile indicates that he attended the Columbia University and Pace University
in New York, US and has an MBA in Finance and International Business.
Like
his forerunner, Obaseki was accused of using a doctored certificate to seek
admission into the university.
Chairman
of the PDP in Edo, Dan Orbih, had said about him, “He claimed he entered
university the year he left secondary school. How could he have gained
admission with such result? The result was not even good enough for any form of
preliminary studies.
“This
can only mean that Godwin Obaseki forged certificates to gain admission to the
university. It is obvious that the man has no academic qualifications as he had
only three credits.”
In
response, Obaseki produced an affidavit from an Abuja High Court which stated
that all of his educational certificates, including his NYSC discharge
certificate were missing and in their stead he produced photocopies of the
original documents.
The
claim was dismissed as “flimsy” and “unconvincing” by the PDP.
Staunchly
defending himself, Obaseki said, “The truth is that I have not had any reason
to look for them in the last 25 years. I know that I kept them somewhere in a
safe box and I had photocopies. When I needed them for the exercise, I could
not find them. So, I swore to an affidavit that I cannot find the originals.
“So
when the whole controversy started raging, my cousin called me from New York
and said, ‘But your originals are here.’ I said, ‘Please, send them to me
now’.”
For
Obaseki, all is well that ends well.
Evan(s) Enwerem
Evan(s)
Enwerem was the Senate President on June 3, 1999 but he did not hold the
position for long as he was embroiled in a scandal involving forgery and
perjury.
He
was accused by colleagues in the Senate, said to be led by Senator Chuba
Okadigbo (who eventually replaced him and was also booted out in a similar
fashion), of using a fake name and falsifying academic records.
The
allegation against Enwerem was that he falsified his name and a debate ensued
as to whether Enwerem’s real name was Evan or Evans.
Eventually,
he was removed as the senate president on November 18, 1999 but remained as a
senator until 2003 and was never prosecuted. He died in 2007.
Stella Oduah
Aged
55, according to Senator Stella Oduah’s profile on the National Assembly’s
page, she reportedly went to St. John’s Primary School and graduated in 1974
with a First School Leaving Certificate; Zixton Secondary School and graduated
in 1978 with West African School Certificate; and St. Paul College and finished
in 1982 with no certificate received indicated.
A
former Minister of Aviation, Oduah is not one to be frightened in times of
scandals – she was accused of being among the privileged few women who
influenced the decisions of ex-president Jonathan and that she allegedly bought
bulletproof automobiles for personal use with government money.
According
to information gleaned from online sources, Oduah claimed she attended St.
Paul’s College, Lawrenceville in Virginia, US, from 1978 to 1982, obtaining a
first degree in Accounting and a master’s degree in 1983. But St. Paul’s
College did not seem to have run a master’s programme.
On Wikipedia,
the senator was also credited with having received an honorary doctoral degree
in Business Administration from Pacific Christian University based in Glendale.
That
claim too said was said to be preposterous. SaharaReporters had, through a story it published, accused
Oduah of falsely claiming to attend the academic institutions.
According
to the online publication, the then President of St. Paul’s, Dr. Claud Flythe,
refused to deny or confirm the senator’s claim when contacted.
It
added that efforts to verify Oduah’s academic claim was fruitless as the
institution’s Office of Alumni Affairs said the college had been closed since
June 2013 due to loss of its accreditation.
In
spite of these weighty allegations, the delectable senator has kept mum. The
citation of the degree has however been yanked from her Wikipedia page.
Andy Uba
According
to his photo-less profile on the National Assembly’s official website, Andy Uba
is 59 years old; he went to St James Primary School, Uga Aguata, Anambra State
and Union Secondary School, Enugu State. SUNDAY PUNCH observed that
the space for dates he attended those schools was vacant. He also claimed in
the profile that he went to California State University, Los Angeles in 2013
with qualifications that read, “Ba, p.hd, dpa award.” His profile like many
other federal lawmakers did not say much.
In
2006, there were claims that Andy Uba did not have a first degree in Geology
which he said he obtained from Concordia University, Canada, in 1984.
His
master’s degree from California State University was also said to be doubtful;
so was his claim to have acquired a doctoral degree from Buxton University in
the United Kingdom, as the institution was said to run unaccredited online
degrees with an address in Portugal, which was not recognized by the United
Kingdom.
Ikechukwu
Obiorah had made these allegations in a bid to overturn Uba’s election as the
senator representing Anambra South Senatorial District in 2011, asking the
election tribunal to invalidate his election and order a rerun poll.
While
the legal battle continues in the court, the senator relishes his privilege as
one of the nation’s federal lawmakers.
Domingo Obende
The
senator representing Edo North senatorial district of Edo State, Domingo
Obende, of the APC was one of the nation’s lawmakers with a moral burden to
prove that the documents presented for election into public offices were not
forged.
A
PDP candidate, Yisa Braimoh, had accused Obende of forging his primary school
certificate for the 2011 National Assembly election.
A
lawsuit Braimoh filed against Obende was dismissed in 2012. He appealed the
judgment but the ruling was upheld by the Court of Appeal.
For
the senator, that was not just an electoral victory, it was a vindication of
his integrity.
Maurice Iwu
Professor
Maurice Iwu was INEC’s Chairman between 2005 and 2010. Last year, the National
Human Rights Commission recommended his prosecution for conducting what
international observers perceived as one of the most bizarre elections ever
held in the world.
The
outcome inaugurated the strange staggering of governorship elections now in
vogue in the country and affecting Bayelsa, Edo, Ondo, Ekiti, Osun and Kogi
states, where election tribunals upturned the fraud-tainted results.
He
bears more burden than that; even his personal integrity was under question
as SaharaReporters questioned
whether Iwu was actually a pharmacist and if he had a first degree from a
university in Cameroon.
The
online publication claimed that Iwu attended Biafra Holy Rosary School of
Pharmacy, Ummuna Orlu from 1968-1969 where he dropped out in Class 4, coinciding
with the same period he indicated to the University of Bradford to have
graduated from a university in Cameroon.
Following
his stint at the school of pharmacy, the ex-INEC boss was said to have
undertaken a course, Dispensing Pharmacy Technician in Compounding, in Côte
d’Ivoire, under the Biafran-Ivory Coast training scholarships for Biafrans. The
course was for two months. Following the end of the Biafran war, he landed a
job as a dispensing chemist (though he was alleged to have paraded himself as a
medical doctor to many of his ‘patients’) in Enugu at 35 Zik Avenue, Uwani,
opposite Leventis stores, Enugu. He held this job between 1970 and 1973.
Iwu
has neither refuted or confirmed these allegations and INEC, too, has remained
silent on the matter.
Following
the role he allegedly played in connection with the N23.29bn bribery of INEC
officials, the EFCC is said to be on his trail.
A
LinkedIn profile of Iwu indicated that he went to “Lagos University” between
1972 and 1977. But another record, according to SaharaReporters showed that the ex-INEC boss obtained his
undergraduate, master’s and PhD degrees from University of Bradford between
1972 and 1978.
Ndi Okereke-Onyiuke
In
2011, according to an online medium, Nigerianvillagesquare.com, the US
Securities and Exchange Commission had sent a request to the City University of
New York’s Graduate School asking to know if a former Director General of the
Nigerian Stock Exchange, Okereke-Onyiuke, had a PhD. The response of the
school’s Director of Student Services and Senior Registrar of CUNY’s Graduate
School, Vincent De Luca, was startling.
The
statement of the school obtained by our correspondent from the website quoted
De Luca as saying, “On January 18, 2011, I caused a search to be conducted of
our student records (including graduation records) at The Graduate Center, at
the request of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission, to
determine if Ms. Ndi Okereke–Onyiuke was ever enrolled in the PhD programme in
Business and if she received a PhD in Business at The Graduate Centre.
“A
thorough search of our electronic and paper files for the names, Ndi Leche
Okereke, Ndi Okereke, Ndi Okereke-Onyiuke and Ndi Lechi Okereke–Onyiuke was
conducted. No record was found that Ms. Ndi Okereke–Onyiuke ever enrolled in
the PhD programme in Business or received a PhD in Business at The Graduate
Centre.”
That
the former NSE boss earned a first class honours degree in Business
Administration, Computer Science and Economics, from Baruch College of the City
College of the City, University of New York in 1975, is also said to be
contestable – as the institution was said to be non-existent at least in the
US, according to SaharaReporters.
The
“Amazon” of the NSE still has all the academic records glowingly displayed on
Bloomberg’s Executive Profile for big guns. She has also yet to counter the
rebuttal of the CUNY’s Graduate School; and no law enforcement agency in
Nigeria is known to have looked into her issue.
Christian Abah
This
month, the Supreme Court ended the dreams of Christian Abah of enjoying the
privilege of making laws for the country.
Abah,
a member of the House of Representatives representing Ado/Okpokwu/Ogbadigbo
Federal Constituency of Benue State, was kicked out of the legislative chamber.
He
was earlier given the boot by a Federal High Court in Abuja in 2016 for
submitting a forged certificate of academic qualification to INEC.
The
court had ordered INEC to issue fresh certificate of return to Abah’s first
runner-up in the PDP’s primary held in 2014, Hassan Saleh.
The
apex court affirmed that he had forged the Ordinary National Diploma
certificate purportedly issued to him in 1985 by the Federal Polytechnic, Mubi,
Adamawa State.
“It
is a must, to take the lead, righting the wrong in our society if and when the
opportunity presents itself as in this appeal. Allowing criminality and
certificate forgery to continue to percolate into the streams, waters and
oceans of our national polity will only mean that our waters are and will
remain dangerously contaminated.
“The
purification efforts must start now and be sustained as we seek, as a nation,
to now change from our old culture of reckless impunity. The Nigerian
Constitution is supreme. It desires that no one who has ever presented a forged
certificate to INEC should contest election into the Nigerian National
Assembly. This is clear and sacrosanct,” the court had said while delivering
its judgment.
Abah
was said to have, in addition to tendering a forged certificate for the 2015
election, falsely claimed in the INEC’s Form CF001 ahead of the 2015 general
elections that he had never submitted a forged certificate to INEC, contrary to
an earlier judgment of an election petition tribunal in 2011, declaring that
the certificate submitted by him was forged.
The
Executive Chairman, Centre for Anti-Corruption and Open Leadership, Debo
Adeniran, told SUNDAY PUNCH that the Nigerian socio-economic and
political system is set up to encourage fraud.
Adeniran,
expressing his disdain for the government’s inability to provide access to free
education to Nigerians and blaming such for forging educational certificates,
said, “This is not to say that it is correct to forge certificates for the
purpose of getting into elective offices or any other purpose. No; this is
because the act itself is not just criminal, it is morally wrong and depicts a
low sense of self-respect and esteem about the forger. It shows lack of
self-confidence in one’s inherent abilities and the false need to parade
oneself as what one is not. It is moral bankruptcy. An honest person would not
lie about educational qualifications no matter what.”
What the laws say
Concerning
perjury, Section 118 of the Criminal Code says, “Any person who commits perjury
is liable to imprisonment for 14 years. If the offender commits the offence in
order to procure the conviction of another person for an offence punishable
with death or with imprisonment for life, he is liable to imprisonment for
life.”
On
forgery, Section 465, of the Criminal Code Act, says, “A person who makes a
false document or writing knowing it to be false, and with intent that it may
in any way be used or acted upon as genuine, whether in the state or elsewhere,
to the prejudice of any person or with intent that any person may, in the
belief that it is genuine, be induced to do or refrain from doing any act,
whether in the state or elsewhere is said to forge the document or writing.”
But
Nigeria’s wheel of justice may grind too slowly to exact punishment on culprits
of perjury and forgery, especially among politically exposed individuals.
“One needs not to be told that anyone capable of forging a certificate to get into office is extremely likely to perpetrate corruption if elected into office. This is one of what is responsible for the rampant corrupt and sharp practices we witness in public and elected offices on daily basis,” the CACOL boss pointed out.
No comments:
Post a Comment