Tag: atiku

  • Atiku makes clarifications on change of name on WASSCE result

    Atiku makes clarifications on change of name on WASSCE result

    Alhaji Atiku Abubakar,  the Presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, (PDP)  has explained the discrepancies in his Senior School Certificate Examination, (SSCE) certificate.

    Atiku’s aide, Dele Momodu offered the clarification on behalf of his principal on Tuesday via a post on his social media platform, X.

    According to Momodu, the clarification became necessary following allegations of forgery against his principal by members of the ruling All Progressives Congress, APC.

    Some members of the APC had questioned the name ”Sadiq Abubakar” in Atiku’s WAEC certificate as against his other credentials.

    However, Momodu said he forwarded the accusations to the former Vice President, who also provided an answer for the discrepancy.

    Momodu wrote, ”The APC busybodies have been bombarding me with allegations of forgery against my Principal, ALHAJI ATIKU ABUBAKAR (GCON), which I immediately forwarded to him and here is his copious response: ‘Yes I used Sadiq Abubakar to sit for my WAEC and after passing my exams I went to swear an affidavit to say I am the same person as ATIKU Abubakar. I went to ABU as Atiku Abuakar and passed my Exams as Atiku Abubakar. Interviewed as Atiku Abubakar by the Federal Civil Service Commission and hired into the Customs Service as Atiku Abubakar. So where is forgery there?’ – ATIKU ABUBAKAR

    ”CAN THE APC social media bullies forward the deluge of questions in circulation to their boss and get instant and direct response…
    I SALUTE ALHAJI ATIKU ABUBAKAR…”

  • Atiku goes for broke over Tinubu’s certificate saga – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    Atiku goes for broke over Tinubu’s certificate saga – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    President Bola Tinubu – acclaimed cat (or bat) with nine lives – seems to face the last test of his staying political power, as former Vice President Atiku Abubakar moves to quash the judgment of the Presidential Election Petitions Court (PEPC), which’s affirmed him (Tinubu) as winner of the February 25, 2023, election.

    Atiku, candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), has filed  35 grounds of appeal at the Supreme Court, which’s 60 days to determine the matters, and hopefully close the 2023 presidential election cycle. Yet, as the final arbiter in election issues in Nigeria, the apex court can make a couple of orders that’ll take closure of the poll beyond the remaining 60-day window.

    One, the court can order a re-run between the two leading candidates (Tinubu and Atiku) at the election, on the basis that Tinubu didn’t score the required majority of lawful votes, and secure 25% of the votes cast in not less than 24 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.

    Two, the court can annull the election for a fresh exercise, on the ground that the February 25 poll – allegedly massively rigged amidst widespread violence – didn’t meet the threshold of freeness, fairness, credibility, transparency and acceptability.

    Similarly, the Supreme Court can make a couple of orders that’ll end the presidential poll cycle. One, uphold the judgment of the PEPC, and thus the declaration by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), which returned Tinubu as President.

    Two, disqualify Tinubu from the February poll, mainly for failure to meet, or contravening the requirements to contesting in the poll, and declare Atiku, as first runner-up, as the President.

    The PEPC, an Appeal Court, acted as the Election Petitions Tribunal for the presidential poll. It evaluated the consolidated petitions of the PDP, Labour Party and Allied Peoples Movement (APM) and their candidates, and dismissed them on September 6, for lack of merit, and affirmed Tinubu’s victory at the election.

    Delivering the lead judgment in a 12-hour plus sitting, chairman of the five-member panel, Justice Haruna Tsammani, said: “This petition accordingly lacks merit. I affirm the return of Bola Ahmed Tinubu as the duly elected President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.”

    Though he accepted the PEPC ruling, Atiku’s dissatisfied with the court’s findings, and has appealed to the Supreme Court, regurgitating most of his pleadings the PEPC had mainly struck out.

    Meanwhile, as he continues to face controversies, fueled by conspiracy theories, Tinubu, whose taciturnity appears to be his strategy for surviving a toxic political environment, opens his flanks for Atiku to query the Tribunal’s failure to properly consider the evidence he placed before it, particularly

    Tinubu’s academic records from Chicago State University (CSU) in Illinois, United States.

    The controversies include: (1) That Tinubu forges his birth, education and job records, swears on oath, and commits perjury.

    (2) He’s convicted for narcotics and money laundering, and forfeited $460,000 to the U.S. government.

    (3) He’s dual citizenship: Nigeria and Guinea, in breach of provisions of the 1999 Constitution.

    Related to the above, are that: (1) Tinubu’s running mate in the election, and now Vice President, Senator Kashim Shettima, was nominated for two elective positions, in violation of provisions of the Electoral Act 2022.

    (2) INEC violated the Act, and its own regulations and guidelines by failing to electronically transmit the presidential results via the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS) onto the INEC Results Viewing (IReV) portal, for real-time perusal by the electorate.

    (3) Tinubu didn’t score the “mandatory” 25% votes cast in the FCT, Abuja, in addition to securing same in at least 24 of 36 states of the federation.
    Atiku, who couldn’t prove allegations of electoral fraud “beyond all reasonable doubts,” alleges that Tinubu forged the certificate he presented to

    INEC in 2022, for the February poll, even as Tinubu denies same, and states that he attended CSU (1977-1979), with the school confirming it.

    Consequently, Atiku, focusing on three crucial inter-related areas: Tinubu’s alleged identity theft; non-studentship at CSU; and forgery of the university’s certificate, subpoenaed, and deposed CSU, to produce and confirm Tinubu’s academic records on oath.

    That’s the basis for CSU’s release of Tinubu’s academic records to Atiku on October 2, and deposition on October 3, in compliance with the order of

    Justice Nancy Maldonado of the U.S. Northern District Court of Illinois in Chicago, who’d upheld earlier order of Magistrate Judge Jeffrey Gilbert for the Northern District of Illinois.

    In all, the CSU presented scores of documents to Atiku, in the order of his four main requests:

    (1) “A true and correct copy of any diploma for a Bachelor of Science degree issued by CSU in 1979,” for which Atiku received seven (7) copies of diplomas CSU issued to seven former students in 1979.

    (2) “A true and correct copy of any diploma issued by CSU to Tinubu,” with no documents produced for Atiku, as CSU maintains that it doesn’t keep copies of student diplomas, as they’re ceremonial.

    (3) “True and correct copies of any diploma issued by CSU (other than Tinubu) that contains the same font, seal, signatures and wording as in the certificate that Tinubu submitted to INEC,” and Atiku received five (5) copies of diplomas, which match the format of the replacement diploma dated June 27, 1997, that CSU issued to Tinubu.

    (4) “True and correct copies of any CSU documents relating to Tinubu that were certified by Jamar C. Orr, Esq., and all communications to or from CSU concerning the certification of such documents by Jamar C. Orr, Esq. between August 1, 2022 and August 1, 2023,” and Atiku received nineteen

    (19) documents relating to Tinubu that were certified by Mr. Jamar Orr between August 1, 2022 and August 1, 2023, but CSU withheld the communications aspect of the request, going by prior ruling of the court.

    So, the October 3 setting was to orally depose CSU, to confirm attendance of and authenticate the certificate it awarded to Tinubu in 1979, and a replacement diploma in 1997.

    The venue was West Wacker Drive in Chicago, Illinois, and at the office of Angela Liu, one of the lawyers hired by Atiku, to help him establish a case of forgery of CSU’s certificate by Tinubu.

    Present at the deposition were five other lawyers from the firm, Dechert LLP. Joining the session were Tinubu’s lawyers, Victor P. Henderson and Oluwole Afolabi (who joined by zoom from New York). Also in attendance were CSU’s lawyer, Michael Hayes, and its registrar, Caleb Westberg.

    In the over five-hour deposition, Atiku’s lawyers’ quizzing to catch Westberg off-guard – to contradict himself or CSU – was to no avail. The school registrar stood his ground, and reaffirmed that Tinubu attended and graduated from CSU, and the certificate awarded to him in 1979, and a replacement diploma in 1997 were authentic, inclusive of the discrepancies, which resulted from changes made to CSU’s certificate format over the years, and human errors.

    Now, armed with Tinubu’s academic records, the pursuit of which he describes as “bringing clarity and definitive answers to these issues that appear to have defied our institutions for nearly a quarter of a century,” Atiku will attempt to fortify his 35-point appeal at the Supreme Court, which may oblige filing of the fresh evidence (in line with Order 2 Rule 12(1) of the “Supreme Court Rules 1985” (as amended), but without giving any probative value to it.

    Atiku, looking to address this fear at a World Press Conference in Abuja on October 5, obliquely implored the Supreme Court: “The issues at stake in this case require us once more to re-dedicate ourselves to both the country and our constitution. Now, we entrust these facts to us all as citizens and as leaders of the institutions (courts) charged with interpreting our constitution.”

    He added: “It should not take months or, indeed, decades, for the institutions (courts) concerned to be able to do their work in establishing the credibility of any certificates presented by candidates for public office.”

    Whatever his misgivings, Atiku must convince the Supreme Court: (1) Why he couldn’t obtain the new evidence (documents) to front-load with his petition at the PEPC, if it’s relevant to him. (Or “is it a case of becoming wiser after the event (the PEPC judgment),” as George A Oguntade JSC (as he then was) avers in UBA Plc v. BTL Ind. Ltd. (2005) 10 NWLR?) (2) That the fresh evidence will have an important, but not necessarily crucial effect on the whole case. (3) That the evidence is apparently credible, capable of being believed and it need not be incontrovertible.

    So, will the Supreme Court admit Atiku’s new evidence, and open the floodgate for fresh materials at appeals? Won’t dubious applicants abuse the process, as Oguntade JSC (as he then was) cautions?

    Nigerians can’t wait for the apex court, which’s “final not because it is infallible, but rather it is infallible because it is final,” according to Chukwudifu Oputa, JSC (as he then was)!

  • Certificate saga: Allow Tinubu to breathe, Igbo leader tells opposition

    Certificate saga: Allow Tinubu to breathe, Igbo leader tells opposition

    The Deputy Apex leader of Ndigbo in Lagos APC, Sir Jude Idimogu, on Friday appealed to opposition parties to allow President Bola Tinubu breathe and concentrate on governance in the interest of the masses.

    Idimogu, the immediate past two-term lawmaker, who represented Oshodi-Isolo Constituency II in the Lagos State House of Assembly,  made the appeal in an interview with NAN in Lagos.

    The former lawmaker, said that after the verdict of the 2023 Presidential Election Petition Tribunal, opposition parties and their candidates needed to rally around the President in the interest of the nation.

    According to him, politicians against the victory of Tinubu at the Feb. 25 Presidential election and at the court must avoid actions capable of dragging the country’s name in the mud.

    The lawmaker, reacting to the certificate saga levelled against President Tinubu by PDP’s presidential candidate, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, described such allegation as politics taken too far and capable of destroying the image of the country.

    “All I want to tell good Nigerians is to understand that Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, did not and will never forge any certificate, and whatever he submitted to INEC is clean and true.

    “We want to appeal to Nigerians to calm down and not allow themselves to be deceived by those dragging Nigeria’s name in the mud.

    “We want the opposition to allow our President, who God gave to us to breathe. Please allow him to breathe for the sake of the masses,” Idimogu said.

    Stating that the Chicago State University never said that the certificate Tinubu submitted to INEC was fake or forged, the lawmaker said that narratives by PDP was an embarrassment to the nation.

    He added, ” They (opposition) should desist from trying to tarnish the image of Nigeria and that of the President Bola Tinubu.”

    According to him, Tinubu is a God-sent President to Nigeria and the best the nation can ever have.

    He said that the only thing Nigerians should do was to give the President total and maximum support for the president to lead the nation out of her challenges.

    “There is nothing anyone can do right now because God has ordained him to be President, and he emerged in spite of all visible hurdles.

    “God has crowned him as President, we should stop all pettiness.

    “No matter what the detractors are doing, they cannot pull Tinubu down because God and Nigerians are behind him and he is a man of grace.

    “The opposition should note this and wait for another election period.

    “The matter of certificate is a pre-election matter and cannot make any opposition presidential candidate come through the back door,” Idimogu said.

    The lawmaker described those behind Tinubu’s certificate issues, as interlopers, who would not achieve anything in the journey they have embarked upon.

    “We know that Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu will overcome as always and he has passed such hurdles several times,” he added.

    Recall that PDP’s Atiku on Thursday addressed a news conference in Abuja, which focused on the validity and authenticity of President Tinubu’s academic records from Chicago State University.

    Atiku has vowed to appeal the tribunal ruling of Sept. 6, which upheld the election of President Tinubu as the winner of the Feb. 25 Presidential election.

  • Tinubu won’t be distracted by Atiku, others – APC

    Tinubu won’t be distracted by Atiku, others – APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has said that President Bola Tinubu was contracted to serve Nigerians and would not be distracted from focusing on the job at hand.

    “No one can distract him; former Vice-President and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), presidential candidate, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, and people like him cannot distract his focus,” the party said in a reaction to Atiku’s Thursday news conference.

    The reaction was signed by Mr Felix Morka, the party’s National Publicity Secretary, and made available to newsmen in Abuja.

    Atiku, at the press conference in Abuja, focused on President Bola Tinubu’s academic records.

    But Morka declared that the APC was not perturbed by the press conference because it lacked purpose and delivered nothing.

    “The news conference lacked purpose and delivered nothing, except the pitiful regurgitation of lies, mindless distortions and deliberate falsehood on his (Atiku)’s infantile obsession with the academic records of President Tinubu.

    “For several weeks now, Nigerians and the world have watched with incredulity Abubakar’s display of utter desperation in his failed bid to become the President of Nigeria.

    “Earlier today, he put his desperation in overdrive during his press conference where he addressed some of the issues in his appeal at the Supreme Court.

    “He bandied unproven charges against President Bola Tinubu in a calculated attempt to shamelessly whip up public sentiments and inordinately pressure the Supreme Court,” Morka said.

    He added that Abubakar should have known better than to demonstrate gross contempt of the highest court by making public comments on a matter he had submitted to the court for adjudication.

    Morka noted that the former Vice-President held the unenviable title of Nigeria’s most prolific election loser and longest-running presidential candidate in the country’s history.

    He added that the APC saw Abubakar’s recent US fishing expedition on Tinubu’s result from Chicago State University as the “last kick of a roundly rejected presidential aspirant”.

    The APC spokesman, while condemning Abubakar’s action which he said had exposed Nigeria and the presidency in foreign land, sympathised with him for spending a lifetime pursuing an unrealised dream.

    He urged the former Vice-President to graciously accept his defeat and quietly lick his political wounds with some dignity.

    “Nigerians rejected him at the polls and he cannot get by subterfuge, what he failed to get through the ballot box.

    “Nigerians validly elected President Tinubu to revamp our economy, restore security, create jobs, provide transformative infrastructure, improve electricity supply, and enhance the living conditions of the masses.

    “President Tinubu has undertaken to serve Nigerians and he will not be distracted by a man who has consistently failed to achieve his self-serving and brutal quest to become Nigeria’s president,” Morka stressed.

  • CSU: My reason behind Tinubu’s academic record – Atiku

    CSU: My reason behind Tinubu’s academic record – Atiku

    Alhaji Atiku Abubakar says his quest for President Bola Tinubu’s academic records from Chicago State University is for the enthronement of truth and morality.

    Abubakar, candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) at the 2023 presidential election, lost the race to President Tinubu of the All Progressives Congress.

    He told newsmen in Abuja on Thursday that he would continue to challenge Tinubu’s election and qualification to contest until the Supreme Court gave its verdict on the matter.

    “This quest is not for or about Abubakar. It is a quest for the enthronement of truth, morality, and accountability in our public affairs.

    “In line with this, I am calling on all well-meaning Nigerians, leaders of thought, religious, political, traditional and community leaders to join me in this campaign.

    “It is to enshrine probity, accountability and the basic principles of justice, morality and uprightness in our country and in our government.

    “I am calling particularly on former Govs. Peter Obi of Labour Party (LP) and Rabiu Kwankwaso of the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) and leaders of every political party in Nigeria to join me.

    “Indeed, I call on every single person who loves this country, as I do, and who wishes nothing but the best for the country, as I do, to join me.

    “This is a task for each and every one of us,” Abubakar said.

    He said his generation of politicians worked hard to return democracy to Nigeria.

    He added that political leadership and active citizenship mattered because they were ways through which citizens worked together to build a country that worked for all who lived in it.

    Abubakar noted that Nigeria’s elections were established and governed by law and founded on the Constitution from which leadership and government derived their legitimacy.

    “The people look up to us as leaders to respect these rules and, where necessary, to defend them. This is what brings us here.

    “Today, we are called upon again as a people to uphold and defend the ground rules of elective government in our country.

    “The Constitution prescribes the requirements for those who seek the highest elective office in the land.

    “It should not take months or, indeed, decades, for the institutions concerned to be able to do their work in establishing the credibility of any certificates presented by candidates for public office,’’ he said.

    Abubakar also told newsmen that his current campaign was at a cost.

    “We undertook this journey at great cost and for important reasons.

    “The ground rules for legitimate governance in our country need to be upheld; the reputation of our country is at stake.

    “I am a democrat by conviction and a citizen of a country that I love.

    “The issues at stake in this case require us once more to re-dedicate ourselves to both the country and to our Constitution,’’ Abubakar said.

    He commended lawyers in Nigeria and in the United States of America that assisted him to bring definitive answers to issues that appeared to “have defied Nigeria’s institutions for nearly a quarter of a century’’.

    He also extended his gratitude to journalists, Nigerians and friends of Nigeria for their patience as he sought to find the facts and establish the truth.

    Fielding questions after his address, Abubakar refuted claims that he betrayed President Tinubu politically.

    He said his political relationship with Tinubu ended in 2007.

    Abubakar explained that this was after he rejected moves to make Tinubu his running mate as presidential candidate of the Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN).

    He explained further that he rejected the choice of Tinubu because he never believed in one religion joint ticket.

    “Where is the ground for him to say I betrayed him?

    “Those of you who are old enough will remember that in 2003 the PDP took over all the states in the Southwest, with the exemption of Lagos State where Tinubu was governor.

    “I stood before the then President Olusegun Obasanjo and said `no; you can’t take Lagos State and he left it.

    “So who is indebted to the other; is it me or Tinubu’’? Abubakar queried.

    He said that after the 2023 presidential election a group of governors visited to placate him but he refused to give them audience.

  • CSU: Here are the major controversies surrounding President Tinubu’s academic records

    CSU: Here are the major controversies surrounding President Tinubu’s academic records

    The controversy over President Bola Tinubu’s academic records gained momentum Monday night after the Chicago State University (CSU) released documents related to Tinubu’s academic history in response to a court order.

    The presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar, had initiated a legal action seeking access to Tinubu’s academic records and verify the authenticity and origin of documents, including diplomas, which Tinubu submitted to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Atiku obtained a court order mandating CSU to release Tinubu’s academic records for scrutiny, latest by noon on Monday.

    The released CSU records reveal discrepancies, including gender mismatch and inconsistencies in name spellings. Below are eight major controversial areas regarding President Bola Tinubu’s academic records:

    1. Identity and Gender Confusion: Records from CSU showed a student named Bola A. Tinubu, marked as “F” for female, contradicting the known gender of President Tinubu. The Social Security number on the released document has been traced to one Bola Adenike Tinubu.

    2. Inconsistencies in Graduation and Course: There are discrepancies between the academic records indicating that Tinubu studied Business Administration and claimed to have studied Accounting with First Class honors at CSU.

    3. College Transcript Anomaly: The college transcript indicated that pre-qualification papers belonged to a woman, raising questions about the authenticity of the academic records.

    4. Dual Citizenship Speculations: Tinubu’s usage of a Southwest College transcript and the possibility of dual citizenship emerged, raising concerns regarding his eligibility as per the Nigerian Constitution.

    5. Educational Timeline Discrepancies: Discrepancies in birth dates and educational timelines were noted, including inconsistencies in the claimed year of graduation from high school and CSU, stirring doubts about the accuracy of the provided information.

    6. Discrepancies in Birthdate: President Tinubu publicly claims a birthdate of March 29, 1952. However, CSU records display his birthdate as March 29, 1954.

    7. Questionable Diploma Issuance Date: Tinubu allegedly presented a CSU diploma signed by President Elnora Daniel, but investigations revealed that Daniel assumed her role at CSU in 1998.

    8. Errors in Name Spelling: Several documents released by CSU contained misspelled variations of Tinubu’s last name, suggesting inconsistencies in recordkeeping.

    9. Inconsistencies in fonts, logos, and characters were found in CSU certificates submitted by Tinubu for the 1979 year, raising authenticity concerns.

  • Just In: Atiku files fresh charge demanding for immediate release of Tinubu’s results

    Just In: Atiku files fresh charge demanding for immediate release of Tinubu’s results

    Atiku Abubakar, the presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the 2023 election, has filed a response in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, insisting on the earlier judgment that ordered the release of his opponent, Bola Tinubu’s academic records at Chicago State University (CSU).

    Atiku is asking the court to order the release of the records before October 3, 2023, in order to allow him use the documents at the Supreme Court in Nigeria on October 5.

    In a 17-page reply to Tinubu’s objections, Atiku’s counsel gave reasons why Judge Nancy Maldonado should discountenance and overrule Tinubu’s objections and order CSU to release the requested documents to Atiku.

    Atiku seeks to have Tinubu’s objections completely dismissed by the court. If the objections are overruled, he seeks that the court should uphold Magistrate Jeffery T. Gilbert’s order. It should also instruct CSU to produce the required documents by October 2, 2023. Additionally, the court should schedule the deposition no later than October 3, 2023, to allow time for transcript finalisation. Furthermore, the court should mandate that the discovery obtained is sent to Nigeria by October 4, 2023, considering the time zone difference. Finally, the evidence should be filed with the Supreme Court no later than October 5, 2023.

    Recall that Atiku had earlier secured an order for CSU to make Tinubu’s academic records available to his legal team. However, Tinubu’s lawyers approached US District Judge Nancy Maldonado, arguing that the earlier decision by the magistrate judge Jeffrey Gilbert needed to be reviewed.

    Maldonado granted the request for a review and delayed the order until Monday.

    Tinubu’s lawyers argue that his academic records are not useful in Nigerian courts and that Atiku’s request is unduly intrusive.

    The documents sought by Atiku, through his counsel, Angela Liu, include the record of admission and acceptance at the university and dates of attendance, including degrees, awards, and honours attained by the former governor of Lagos State at the university, among others.

  • Chicago varsity: Atiku says I hope record won’t cause Nigerians heart attack

    Chicago varsity: Atiku says I hope record won’t cause Nigerians heart attack

    The 2023 Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar, has raised concerns over the academic records of President Bola Tinubu saying that he hopes it would not make Nigerians a heart attack.

    Atiku expressed these concerns through his Media Aide, Paul Ibe, who has implied that President Tinubu may be harbouring undisclosed information about his academic history, specifically concerning Chicago State University.

    “It should be now obvious even to the blind that Tinubu is hiding something in his records at the Chicago State University, and even elsewhere.

    “I do hope whatever it may be, it will not be of a scope that will give Nigerians a heart attack. Nigerians will soon see the true position of Atiku on the records of Tinubu at CSU. It is just a matter of time.” Ibe said in a statement.

    These remarks came in response to a legal motion initiated by Tinubu, contesting an order from the Northern District of Illinois that mandated Chicago State University to release his academic records within a strict two-day time frame.

    #

  • Supreme Court and Atiku’s search for ‘fresh evidence’ on Tinubu’s records

    Supreme Court and Atiku’s search for ‘fresh evidence’ on Tinubu’s records

    By Ehichioya Ezomon 

    In weeks, the Supreme Court may be called upon to decide whether to admit new evidence on appeals from the Presidential Election Petitions Court (PEPC) that ruled on petitions from the February 25 election.

    The five-member Tribunal dismissed the petitions by opposition candidates and their parties, seeking to upturn the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) declaration of Bola Tinubu of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) as winner of the poll.

    Tinubu defeated 17 candidates, including former Vice President Atiku Abubakar of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), former Anambra State Governor Peter Obi of Labour Party, and former Kano State Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso of New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP), who emerged 1st, 2nd and 3rd runners-up, accordingly.

    Tinubu was inaugurated on May 29 as the 16th President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Nigeria.

    Dissatisfied, Atiku and Obi (and the Allied Peoples Movement (APM)) petitioned the Tribunal to be declared President, claiming to have scored the majority of lawful votes, and secured 25% of votes cast in at least 24 States and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.

    In the alternative, Atiku and Obi called for ouster of President Tinubu, as unqualified to contest the poll, unable to secure the highest number of lawful votes, and for INEC’s failure to comply substantially with the provisions of relevant laws in the conduct of the election and return thereof.

    But the Tribunal dismissed the consolidated petitions by Atiku, Obi and APM as without merit, and affirmed Tinubu as the duly elected President of Nigeria.

    Atiku and Obi intend to appeal to the Supreme Court, to reverse the judgment they quarrel with its findings on fact, and not doing substantial justice to their petitions.

    Specifically, Atiku’s queries the Tribunal’s failure to properly evaluate evidence he placed before it, including Tinubu’s academic records from Chicago State University (CSU) in the United States.

    Atiku’s filed a subpoena application to depose CSU, to authenticate Tinubu’s certificate(s), and explain the discrepancies observed in the records.

    He also ferrets out facts, such as documentation for Tinubu’s passport, visa, social security card, driver’s license and payment of tuition fees.

    Atiku wants the fresh evidence to include in his appeal to the Supreme Court, as he alleges that Tinubu forged the certificate(s) he presented to INEC in 2022, for the February poll, even as Tinubu denies same, and states that he attended CSU (1977-1979), with the School confirming this to inquisitors.

    Indeed, CSU has deposed to an affidavit in court, affirming Tinubu’s attendance and graduation at the School; the certified certificates and diplomas it awards; and the discrepancies in Tinubu’s records it blames on human errors that don’t impeach their authenticity.

    Two confirmations of Tinubu’s attendance at CSU surfaced lately: The University released Tinubu’s transcripts, showing his scores in 17 subject areas, and the CTC of his GCE ‘A’ & ‘O’ Levels results; and a reporting by CBS News (CBS Broadcasting Inc.), quoted CSU as stating that it’s “confident in the veracity and integrity of their records regarding Tinubu’s completion of graduation requirements and degree certificate.” (The statement was widely published in Nigerian dailies and on social media at the weekend)

    Profoundly, the academic transcripts indicate that of the 17 subjects for evaluation, Tinubu had ‘As’ in 12, ‘Bs’ in four and “C” in one.

    Despite these disclosures, Atiku sources for fresh evidence in his avowal to appeal to the Supreme Court on or before September 20.

    Can the Supreme Court admit new evidence to sack or disqualify Tinubu from the February 25 poll?

    Put succinctly, does the Supreme Court entertain additional evidence on matters on appeal before it, as it’s virtually an appellate body?

    Certainly, the Supreme Court has power to entertain extra evidence on appeals, drawing from Order 2 Rule 12 of the “Supreme Court Rules 1985” (as amended).

    Onnoghen JSC, I T Muhammad JSC and Oguntade JSC (as they were then) state instances in which Order 2 Rule 12(1) applies to admit further evidence, and how to check frivolous applications that seek to remedy alleged anomalies at the trial stage.

    The following excerpts are taken from a 2019 article on, “The Supreme Court’s Power To Take Fresh Appeal,” written by a Legal Practitioner, Oluwakemi Adeyemi, and a publication of LawGlobalHub.com.

    Onnoghen observed in Ehinlawo v. Oke & 2 Ors (2008) that: “A party, who wishes the court to receive the evidence of witnesses (where they were not called at the trial) or to order the production of any document, exhibit or other thing connected with the proceedings in accordance with the provisions of section 33 of the Act (Supreme Court Rules), shall apply for leave on notice of motion prior to the date set down for the hearing of the appeal.

    “It is settled law that it is within the discretion of the court to decide whether or not to admit further/additional evidence on appeal. It is also settled that for the court to exercise that discretion one way or the other, it must act not only judicially but (also) judiciously.

    “It is in an effort at attaining the standard of exercising its discretion judicially and judiciously that the courts have set down certain principles/conditions as guides. The principles are: 1) the evidence sought to be adduced must be such that could not have been with reasonable diligence obtained for use at the trial; 2) the evidence should be such that if admitted would have an important, not necessary (sic necessarily) crucial effect on the whole case, and, 3) the evidence must be such that it is apparently credible in the sense that it is capable of being believed and it need not be incontrovertible — see UBA Plc v. BTL Ind. Ltd. (2005) 10 NWLR (Pt. 933) 356 at 370–371. The above conditions must co-exist for the court to exercise its discretion in favour of the applicant.”

    Equally, I T Muhammad JSC, stated that: “The trite position of the law is that where the Court of Appeal wrongly disturbed any finding of fact of a trial court, the Supreme Court will not hesitate in restoring that finding. See: Board of Customs and Excise v. Barau (1987) 10 SC 48.

    “Finally, on this issue, I may have to reiterate the function of an Appellate Court on questions of facts. It is mainly limited to seeking whether or not there was evidence before the trial court upon which its decision on facts was based; whether it wrongly accepted or rejected any evidence tendered at the trial; whether evidence called by either party to the conflict was put on either side of the imaginary scale and weighed one against (the) other.

    “In other words, whether the trial court properly evaluated the evidence, whether the trial court correctly approached the assessment of the evidence before it and whether the evidence properly admitted was sufficient to support the decision upon the inference drawn therefrom. This is the only way and procedure open to an appellate court in the consideration of an appeal brought before it.”

    However, Oguntade JSC advises in UBA PIc. v. BTL Ind. Ltd. that the court should weigh the “reasonableness of the explanation (by applicant) as to why the documents, though available at the time of trial, were not tendered therein.”

    In the learned Lord’s words: “Human experience shows that we often get wiser after an event. When judgment has been given in a case, parties with the advantage of what the court said in the judgment get a new awareness of what they might have done better or not done at all. If the door were left open for everyone who has fought and lost a case at the court of trial to bring new evidence on appeal, there would be no end to litigation and all the parties would be worse for the situation.

    “For the appellant to seek to adduce the documents as additional evidence, it means they are relevant to his case at the trial and being so relevant, it was the duty of the appellant to deliberately seek and obtain them…”

    If the fresh evidence Atiku seeks from Tinubu’s academic records was relevant to his petition at the Tribunal, how much efforts did he put in to obtain the documents? Or “is it a case of becoming wiser after the event (the PEPC judgment),” as Oguntade JSC avers?

    Atiku may be playing for luck, as his U.S. lawyer, Alexandre de Gramont, doubts the Supreme Court will accept fresh evidence, he told Judge Gilbert at the hearing of the application in the U.S. on September 12.

    Mr Gramont said: “Your Honour, we don’t know whether the Nigerian Supreme Court would be receptive to the new evidence or not, but we just want to be able to present the new evidence to them from CSU,” adding that the Tribunal (PEPC) lacked the evidence from CSU for its ruling on September 6.

    A viral report from the court session posted on social media quoted Judge Gilbert as asking if CSU’s authorities could vouch for Tinubu’s certificate under oath, to which CSU’s lawyer, Michael Hayes, reportedly hedged, and said, “they don’t know where” (and how Tinubu obtained it).

    But this seems to contradict prior statements – corroborated lately by CSU’s releases, including Tinubu’s transcripts – that Tinubu attended and graduated from CSU.

    However, Christopher Carmichael, who held brief for Tinubu’s lawyers, said Tinubu’s records were authentic, as confirmed repeatedly by CSU.

    Mr Carmichael said there wasn’t need to depose CSU, as “Atiku’s on a fishing expedition,” knowing that the Supreme Court won’t entertain fresh evidence.

    Atiku’s lawyer, Alexandre de Gramont, admitted as much, saying Atiku had Tinubu’s “documents” which he wanted CSU to confirm their authenticity, and explain discrepancies therein.

    After the lawyers’ had argued the application, Judge Gilbert adjourned for ruling, or to allow for further arguments, and asked the lawyers to study the court’s records, and effect any necessary changes.

    That court ruling is expectantly awaited by the Atiku and Tinubu camps, and the generality of Nigerians, who want the final word from the Supreme Court on who truly won the February 25 election!

  • Tinubu moves to block Atiku access to CSU records as US Court grants motion to file PEPC verdict

    Tinubu moves to block Atiku access to CSU records as US Court grants motion to file PEPC verdict

    A U.S. federal court has granted President Bola Tinubu’s motion to use documents from the Nigerian tribunal judgement passed last Wednesday to block his Chicago State University (CSU) records from being accessed by Atiku Abubakar, his main opponent at the February polls.

    Court filings obtained by an online medium showed that Judge Jeffrey Gilbert on Tuesday okayed Tinubu’s request to tender the tribunal ruling that upheld his election victory as exhibits to defend his cause at the U.S. Court for the Northern District of Illinois in Chicago.

    “Intervenor Bola A. Tinubu’s Motion for Leave to File Sur-Response [27] is granted,” reads the document released Tuesday ahead of the in-court hearing of the matter later today. “Intervenor shall file the sur-response and exhibits attached as ECF Nos. 27-1 and 27-2 as separate CM/ECF docket entries.”

    Gilbert further moved up the time of the hearing

    from 2:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m., per the court filing seen by The Gazette.

    “At the request of all counsel, the hearing set for 9/12/23 is reset to 1:30 p.m. This is a change in time only. Out of town counsel may appear at the hearing by using the following number.”

    The time change would presumably allow all parties to argue and tender all required exhibits.

    Abubakar seeks to clarify discrepancies regarding Tinubu’s background, from the real name under which he entered the U.S. to his age, gender, and admission and graduation.