Tag: Certificate Forgery

  • Aiyedatiwa gives lawyer 7-day ultimatum to retract certificate forgery allegations

    Aiyedatiwa gives lawyer 7-day ultimatum to retract certificate forgery allegations

    Gov. Lucky Aiyedatiwa of Ondo State, on Monday, gave a legal practitioner, Oladotun Hassan, a seven-day ultimatum to retract his allegation of certificate forgery levelled against him or be sued.

    Aiyedatiwa, in a letter titled: “Defamatory Publications Against Mr Lucky Orimisan Aiyedatiwa” written by his counsel, Ebun-Olu Adegboruwa, SAN, also demanded an apology in three national dailies.

    The letter, dated April 8, was made available to newsmen in Abuja.

    “The above matter refers. We are solicitors to His Excellency, the Governor of Ondo State, Mr. Lucky Orimisan Aiyedatiwa (“our Client”) on whose behalf we write this letter on the above subject matter.

    “It has come to the attention of our client that by an unsolicited letter dated June 2, 2023, you caused to be authored and submitted to the Nigeria Police Force, an unsubstantiated complaint of misrepresentation, certificate forgery, examination malpractice and perjury, against our client.

    “Whereas, you are not a registered voter in or an indigene of Ondo State to possess the requisite locus to ground your said complaint.

    “Your petition was cleverly routed through unauthorized sources within the police force and without recourse to our client, a report was purportedly submitted to you by the police dated February 19, 2024.

    “You thereafter caused the said report to be widely circulated as the basis of a malicious design to disqualify our client from participating in the governorship primary election in Ondo State.

    “You thereafter caused another letter to be written to the National Secretariat of the All Progressives Congress (APC) with the same purpose of disqualifying our client from participating in the governorship primary election of the said party fixed for April 2024.

    “You have since led a vicious campaign of calumny against our client through these and other false publications, all of which have brought our client into public ridicule and opprobrium, albeit without any justification whatsoever,” he said.

    The senior lawyer also accused Hassan of writing another letter on April 5, alleging that Aiyedatiwa, instead of clearing his name on the alleged forgery, the governor conspired with DIG Sylvester Alabi to compromise police integrity.

    Adegboruwa alleged that Hassan’s intention was to stop Aiyedatiwa from contesting in the APC primary slated for April and the November governorship election in the state.

    He, therefore, gave him seven demands, including “adequate compensation for the false and libelous publications,” against the governor within seven days of receiving the letter of face a criminal charge.

  • Tinubu’s Certificate forgery: Atiku files motion at Supreme Court

    Tinubu’s Certificate forgery: Atiku files motion at Supreme Court

    In his persistent certificate forgery claim against President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the Presidential Candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, Atiku Abubakar, has filed a motion at the Nigerian Supreme Court, presenting new evidence to contest Tinubu’s qualifications in the February 25, 2023, presidential election.

    Atiku, a former Vice President, alleges that Tinubu’s Diploma Certificate from Chicago State University (CSU), which was used for his election qualifications, is a forgery.

    Atiku’s legal team, led by Chris Uche SAN, has filed a motion requesting the Supreme Court to admit this new evidence in support of his ongoing appeal. The motion’s filing is marked SC/CV/935/2023.

    The motion is based on various grounds, including the academic record release of Tinubu, statements by CSU’s Registrar, and the deposition of the same witness regarding the diploma certificate.

    The respondents in the motion are the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Bola Ahmed Tinubu, and the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Atiku seeks the court’s permission to present additional evidence to support his claim that the certificate presented by Tinubu to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) did not originate from Chicago State University, suggesting it was forged.

    The Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Olukayode Ariwoola, is expected to constitute the Supreme Court panel that will hear the appeal arising from the judgment of the Presidential Election Petitions Court in the coming week.

  • Alleged certificate forgery: Nigeria now wears outlook of cheats worldwide, says Sowunmi

    Alleged certificate forgery: Nigeria now wears outlook of cheats worldwide, says Sowunmi

    A chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Segun Sowunmi, on Thursday zeroed in on the controversy trailing the certificate of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, saying the development portrays the country as a nation of cheats.

    Recall the PDP had claimed that Tinubu forged his credentials submitted to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) for the 2023 election, a development which forced the party’s presidential candidate Atiku Abubakar to demand the Nigerian leader’s certificate from the Chicago State University (CSU).

    While Atiku had addressed the press on Thursday, doubling down on his claims about Tinubu’s academic records, Sowunmi wondered why INEC did not disqualify the former Lagos State governor over the development.

    “We have been de-robed,” he said on a national tv program on Thursday.

    “People in England are telling me now that nurses are going to have to do their nursing qualification examination because we have now become a nation of cheaters. Do you know why? We have now become a nation of duplicitous people.

    “Even in the backend of some countries, the governments are whispering behind our back,” he added.

    During the interview, he took a swipe at the stance of the CSU regarding the President’s certificate submitted to INEC. According to him, the American institution should bury its head in shame.

    “Must we now get to a position in the world where we are sending thousands of emails to one institution to ask for the same record that could have been produced?

    “Did you read the deposition? Even the school itself must bury its head in shame. The school has a right to say ‘This is totally the position we have and be unambiguous about it.’ They can’t write that the deposition in a manner.”

  • 2023: Court dismisses certificate forgery suit against Tinubu

    2023: Court dismisses certificate forgery suit against Tinubu

    A Federal High Court, Abuja, on Tuesday, dismissed a certificate forgery suit filed by the Action Alliance (AA) against Sen. Bola Tinubu, presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Justice Obiora Egwuatu, in a judgement, held that the suit instituted by AA was statute barred, having not been commenced within the mandatory 14 days provided for under the 1999 Constitution (as amended by the Fourth Alteration Act).

    Justice Egwuatu said that the suit had become academic and grossly incompetent, hence, the court lacked the requisite jurisdiction to entertain it or grant the reliefs sought by the plaintiff.

    The judge, who said that the plaintiff lacked locus standi to filed the suit, also held that it acted like a busy body, having interfered in the internal affairs of another party.

    He consequently dismissed the suit for constituting an abuse of court process.

    AA, in a suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/954/2022, had sued the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), APC and Sen. Bola Ahmed Tinubu as 1st to 3rd defendants respectively.

    In a writ of summons dated and filed on June 21 by its lawyer, U.O. Ukairo, AA sought a court declaration that the claim of the 3rd defendant (Tinubu) that he attended Government College, Ibadan and University of Chicago on his INEC FORM CF 001 in 1999 which he presented to the 1st defendant (INEC) was false.

    It also sought a declaration that the false information on the APC presidential candidate’s “INEC FORM CF 001 wherein he claims to have been awarded a Bachelor of Science Degree in Economics by the University of Chicago is a forged certificate.”

    It further sought a declaration that in view of Section 137(1)(j) of the 1999 Constitution, Tinubu, having in 1999 presented a forged certificate to INEC in INEC FORM CF 001 which he submitted as a candidate in the 1999 general elections for the post of the Governor of Lagos State was not qualified to contest for the office of president of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    The party, which urged the court to declare that the submission Tinubu’s name to the electoral umpire by the APC (2nd defendant) as its 2023 presidential candidate is null and void and of no effects, prayed for an order of perpetual injunction restraining INEC from publishing his name as a candidate in the general elections.

    AA also sought an order of perpetual injunction restraining INEC from listing APC as a political party in the ballot for the conduct of the 2023 presidential election to be conducted by INEC.

    But in a preliminary objection dated Nov  1 and filed on Nov. 2 by the APC and Tinubu’s legal team led by Lateef Fagbemi, SAN, they argued that the court lacked jurisdiction to entertain the suit.

    They, therefore, urged the court to strike out the suit in its entirety.

    They said that the originating process was fundamentally and incurably defective.

    Besides, the defendants said that the suit disclosed no reasonable cause of action against them, especially the 3rd defendant (Tinubu), among other arguments.

  • Court to hear Tinubu’s alleged certificate forgery on Oct. 12

    Court to hear Tinubu’s alleged certificate forgery on Oct. 12

    Justice Obiora Egwuatu of a Federal High Court in Abuja on Thursday fixed October 12 for hearing in a suit seeking the disqualification of the Presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, from the 2023 election on alleged certificate forgery.

     

    The judge fixed the new date to enable parties in the suit complete the filing of their processes and exchange the same as required by law before the adjourned date.

     

    Tinubu, who is the major defendant in the alleged certificate forgery saga has, however, engaged the services of a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Mr Babatunde Ogala, to enable him to fortify his defense.

     

    At Thursday’s proceedings, counsel for Action Alliance which instituted the suit, Mr. Ukpai Ukairo, informed the court that he just received the Notice of Preliminary Objection from Tinubu asking the court not to entertain the case against him on various grounds.

     

    Amongst the grounds, Tinubu claimed that the foundation for the certificate forgery suit against him was rooted in the 1999 electoral forms he submitted to the then electoral body.

     

    He also claimed that the report of the Lagos State House of Assembly which probed him on the alleged certificate forgery is the main foundation of the fresh suit and hence, has become statute-barred.

     

    Ukairo, however, informed the court that the claims of the former Lagos State Governor especially on the statute barred position would be adequately addressed in the subsequent proceedings.

    Court to hear Tinubu's alleged certificate forgery on Oct. 12
    Bola Ahmed Tinubu

     

    Ukairo told the Judge that Tinubu’s claims made orally by his counsel have to be made formally and served on him to enable him to respond appropriately.

     

    While the Independent National Electoral Commission INEC which is the 1st defendant in the suit, sought time to respond to the suit, the APC was not represented in court despite proof of service of the suit on it.

     

    The Judge accordingly adjourned the matter till October 12, for parties to put their houses in order for proper hearing of the alleged certificate forgery suit.

     

    Egwuatu in addition ordered the plaintiff to be ready to call its witnesses on the adjourned date so as to establish his case against Tinubu.

     

    The Action Alliance had on June 21 asked a Federal High Court to restrain the Independent National Electoral Commission from including the name of the All Progressives Congress in the ballot of the 2023 presidential election.

     

    The plaintiff in the Writ of Summon marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/954/2022, predicated its request on the claim that both the APC and its presidential candidate, Bola Tinubu are not qualified to participate in the 2023 presidential election on alleged forgery committed by Tinubu in 1999.

  • 2023: ‘Certificate forgery’ threatens Tinubu’s bid – By Ehichioya Ezomon

    ‘Eneke’ the bird, in acclaimed Prof. Chinua Achebe’s masterpiece, “Things Fall Apart,” says, “Since men have learned to shoot without missing, he has learned to fly without perching.”

    This analogy comes handy in the allegation of “forgery” against the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    He’s accused of submitting altered credentials to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), for the February-March 2023 general election in Nigeria.

    Of concern is that the new documents differ from those he presented when he vied for governor of Lagos State in 1999, won the seat and ruled from 1999 to 2007.

    Missing from the documents are Tinubu’s primary and secondary school records, which he claims were lost when state actors torched his home during the struggles for revalidation of the annulled June 12, 1993, election.

    Tinubu, a Senator in the pseudo-military-civilian era, became a major player in the ‘June 12 struggle,’ leading to threats to his life, and prompting him to flee into exile.

    Eleven days to the July 15 deadline for substitution of candidates for the 2023 polls, Tinubu, the “Jagaban Borgu,” sweats it out to fill his running mate’s slot.

    He’s faced a lot of blowback for allegedly scheming to run on a Muslim-Muslim ticket in a nearly, evenly divided Nigeria between adherents of Christianity and Islam.

    Failing to name a running mate after the June 6-8, 2022, APC primaries in Abuja, Tinubu (and some presidential candidates) has recourse to a non-extant “placeholder” as proxy for his “authentic” vice presidential candidate.

    Commentators and legal experts have criticised the adoption of a “placeholder” or stand-in, hold-in or proxy as unknown to the laws guiding elections in Nigeria.

    The Centre for Reforms and Public Advocacy (CRPA), which’s also faulted Tinubu’s pick of a placeholder for his running mate, has threatened to sue him for perjury, for reportedly submitting forged documents to the INEC.

    The CRPA had given the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Usman Alkali Baba, a 48-hour ultimatum to arrest and prosecute Tinubu, failing which he would be served a court order of mandamus to effect the arrest.

    The CRPA’s legal adviser and rights activist, Agu Kalu, at a press conference in Abuja on June 25, said Tinubu isn’t qualified to be president of Nigeria, as he supplied “false information on oath” in Form EC 9 to the INEC.

    Mr Kalu specifically alleged that Tinubu, in 1999, claimed to have attended Saint Paul’s Aroloya Children’s Home School, Ibadan, between 1958 and 1964, and Government College, Ibadan, between 1965 and 1969.

    But in his 2022 Form EC 9 to the INEC, Tinubu left blank the columns for primary and secondary schools – leading to the assumption he didn’t attend any of such schools.

    This, to the CRPA, is unimaginable, as Tinubu claims university qualifications in the same INEC’s Form EC 9, and thus should answer to the courts that he’s dragged for years by legal luminary, Chief Gani Fawehinmi (SAN).

    As did – and still do – many Nigerians, including former Military Governor and chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), retired Commodore Olabode George, Gani had questioned Tinubu’s biological data (bio data).

    Gani’s writs focused on Tinubu’s conflicting statements, and documents regarding his name(s), parentage, place of birth, state of origin, primary and secondary schools, and universities attended, at home and abroad, and the certificates obtained therefrom.

    The matter traveled the courts, and became functus officio (of no further authority or legal effect) when Gani died, and yet, the Tinubu qualifications saga remains.

    The posers needing answers: Why are the credentials that Tinubu submitted in 2022 to the INEC different from or at variance with the ones he tendered in 1999?

    Are there electoral laws prohibiting candidates from presenting credentials separate from the documents submitted in previous election(s)?

    Is levying forgery against Tinubu based on circumstantial evidence or “proof beyond reasonable doubt,” as the main ingredient for determination of a criminal felony?

    When has forgery become a heinous crime to attract arrest of Tinubu, as canvassed, instead of filing a cause against him, to appear in court and defend himself?

    Tinubu seems to imbibe the saying, “Once bitten, twice shy,” to stay ahead of those after his ambition, and avoid political troubles that filings with INEC could occasion.

    He wants to prevent what happened to Bayelsa State Goveror-elect, David Lyon, who, via a Supreme Court judgment on February 13, 2020, lost the seat 24 hours to swearing in, due to errors in the names of his Deputy-Governor-elect, Senator Biobarakuma Degi-Eremienyo! Like the Biblical Moses, Lyon saw the Government House in Yenagoa, Bayelsa’s capital city, without occupying it!

    Tinubu may’ve also taken lessons from the playbook of Edo State Governor Godwin Obaseki, who endured similar allegations, but outsmarted his opponents at the courts.

    Like Tinubu faces, the plaintiffs in the Obaseki case – the All Progressives Congress and another – alleged that the credentials submitted for his election in 2016 didn’t match the documents he tendered for his re-election in 2020.

    That Obaseki didn’t attend the University of Ibadan (UI), Ibadan, as he lacked the entry requirements for Classical Studies in 1976, and forged the institution’s certificate.

    They alleged discrepancies that backgrounded the case, such as irregular/incomplete/altered/missing dates, signatures and other information in the credentials.

    The plaintiffs called six witnesses, including a student of the university that graduated in Classical Studies in 1976, and one that studied Agricultural Economics (1974-1978).

    Obaseki denied the charges, and called three witnesses, counting Abayomi Ajayi, UI’s Deputy Registrar, Legal, and Eghosa Osaghae, a Prof. of Comparative Politics at UI, and Obaseki’s secondary school and university mate.

    Below is the decision of a Federal High Court in Abuja, in the suit against Obaseki, that can serves as a “locus classicus” (a classic case or example) in forgery matters.

    In his ruling, Justice Ahmed Mohammed held that the plaintiffs failed to “prove beyond reasonable doubt,” the alleged discrepancies in the documents that Obaseki filed with the INEC in 2022.

    The Judge said that, “the evidence of the plaintiffs is at variance with their allegations,” noting that, “allegation of forgery borders on crime, which must be proved beyond reasonable doubt.”

    “In the instant case, no iota of evidence, talk-less of a proof beyond reasonable doubt, was brought to prove the allegation of forgery against the first defendant (Obaseki).

    “Having thoroughly analysed the evidence of this case, it is the conclusion of this court that the defendant did not forge his O’Level certificate, his HSC certificate, and particularly his University of Ibadan degree certificate. Accordingly, the plaintiffs’ case is dismissed.”

    As Tinubu’s 1999 filings with INEC vary from the ones in 2022, can the CRPA prove a case of forgery, and stop his lifelong ambition to rule Nigeria?

    As Nigerians await the CRPA to advance its arrest and legal threats against Tinubu, and the courts to make their pronouncements accordingly, the intriguing and thought-provoking issue has the potential to shape the direction of the 2023 polls, and the polity therefrom.

     

    *Mr Ezomon, Journalist and Media Consultant, writes from Lagos, Nigeria

  • Again, Obaseki floors APC, as A’Court dismisses certificate forgery suit, fines party N350k

    Again, Obaseki floors APC, as A’Court dismisses certificate forgery suit, fines party N350k

    The Court of Appeal in Abuja on Thursday, dismissed the alleged University of Ibadan degree certificate forgery suit filed by the All Progressives Congress, (APC) against Governor Godwin Obaseki of Edo.
    The court dismissed the suit for lacking in merit and awarded N250, 000 cost in favour of Obaseki and N50,000 each for the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and the Peoples Democratic Party, (PDP).
    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG reports that Justice Ahmed Mohammed of the Federal High Court, Abuja had on Jan. 9, dismissed the alleged certificate forgery suit against Obaseki.
    The Judge had described the APC’s allegation as strange saying it was like an outsider telling a man in his house that he is not the father of a child.
    Apparently not satisfied with the decision of the lower court, the APC approached the appellate court to challenge the judgment.
    Delivering judgment in the appeal, Justice Stephen Adah held that the lower court was right in it’s findings and conclusions.
    Justice Adah upheld the testimony of the Deputy Registrar, Legal, University of Ibadan, Mr Abayomi Ajayi who confirmed that Obaseki attended the university in 1976 and fulfilled the requirement for admission to study Classical Studies.
    The judge maintained that the evidence of Ajayi was direct in showing that Obaseki did not forge the certificate he submitted to the Independent National Electoral Commission( INEC) to secure his clearance for participation in the governorship election.
    The appellate court held that the APC failed to prove the certificate forgery allegation and that the appeal was unmeritorious.
    The court subsequently dismissed the appeal with N250, 000 cost in favour of Obaseki and N50 ,000 each in favour of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and INEC.
  • Appeal Court reserves judgment on certificate forgery suit against Obaseki

    Appeal Court reserves judgment on certificate forgery suit against Obaseki

    The Court of Appeal sitting in Abuja has reserved judgment in the appeal filed by the All Progressives Congress (APC) and its chieftain, Williams Edobor, challenging the certificate presented by Governor Godwin Obaseki to contest the 2020 governorship election in Edo State.

    A three-man panel of justices of the appellate court made the reservation after listening to arguments from both parties on Monday in the nation’s capital.

    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG reports that this comes two months after a Federal High Court in Abuja dismissed the certificate forgery suit against Governor Obaseki.

    In their brief of argument, the APC and its chieftain argued that at the trial court, issues of forgery and falsification were raised but the court only determined the issue of forgery and left out that of falsification.

    Counsel to the APC, Akin Olujimi, insisted that the purported degree certificate submitted by Governor Obaseki to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) was false.

    But in his response, counsel to the governor argued that based on the pleadings of the appellant, the false information allegedly submitted by the respondent was on the fact that he did not graduate from the University of Ibadan in 1979, neither did he resign from Afri Investment Limited.

    On January 9, Justice Ahmed Mohammed of the Federal High Court in Abuja had dismissed the alleged certificate forgery suit against Governor Obaseki, saying the plaintiffs relied on the photocopied document presented by the governor without getting in touch with the university to verify the authenticity of the said certificate.

    He added that no iota of truth was brought before the court by the plaintiffs who alleged forgery, saying it was a criminal matter, but the claimants were unable to prove their case.

    The judge had also held that the Deputy Registrar (Legal) of the University of Ibadan had given evidence in the suit that the university duly issued the certificate to Governor Obaseki.

    According to him, the governor was duly and properly admitted to study Classics, which was later renamed Classical Studies in 1976 and graduated in 1979.

    Justice Mohammed concluded that the plaintiffs failed to prove their allegations of forgery against Governor Obaseki and, thereby, dismissed the case.

  • Certificate forgery: Why APC’s suit against Obaseki was dismissed – Court

    Certificate forgery: Why APC’s suit against Obaseki was dismissed – Court

    A Federal High Court sitting in Abuja on Saturday dismissed the alleged certificate forgery suit filed against the governor of Edo State, Godwin Obaseki.

    The suit was instituted against the governor by the All Progressives Congress (APC) and a chieftain of the party, Williams Edobor, following the Edo State governorship election.

    Delivering the judgement in the suit on Saturday, Justice Ahmed Mohammed said the plaintiffs relied on the photocopied document presented by Governor Obaseki without getting in touch with the university to verify the authenticity of the said certificate.

    He stated that no iota of truth was brought before the court by the plaintiffs who alleged forgery, saying it was a criminal matter, but the claimants were unable to prove their case.

    The judge held that the Deputy Registrar (Legal) of the University of Ibadan had given evidence in the suit that the university duly issued the certificate to Governor Obaseki.

    He noted that the governor was duly and properly admitted to study Classics which was later renamed Classical Studies in 1976 and graduated in 1979.

    According to Justice Mohammed, the plaintiffs failed to prove their allegations of forgery against Governor Obaseki, and, thereby, the case is dismissed.

    But the judge did not award any cost against the plaintiffs.

    Counsels to both parties in the suit had closed their cases after presenting witnesses and evidence to the court.

    Lawyer to the plaintiffs, Akin Olujimi, had on Thursday adopted his final written address, asking the court to affirm their position that the governor presented a forged certificate to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and was unfit to occupy the office.

    But his submission was rejected by Governor Obaseki’s counsel, Ken Mozia, who urged the court to dismiss the suit over what he described as the plaintiff’s failure to prove their case.

    Governor Obaseki of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) defeated Mr Osagie Ize-Iyamu of the APC in the September 19, 2020 poll to secure another term in office.

  • BREAKING: Court dismisses APC’s certificate forgery case against Obaseki

    BREAKING: Court dismisses APC’s certificate forgery case against Obaseki

    A Federal High Court sitting in Abuja has dismissed the alleged certificate forgery suit filed against the governor of Edo State, Godwin Obaseki.

    Justice Ahmed Mohammed delivered the judgment on Saturday in a suit filed by the All Progressives Party (APC) and a chieftain of the party, Williams Edobor, against the governor.

    The judge also declared Obaseki duly fit to contest the September 2020 governorship election.

    The APC and Edobor had filed the suit alleging that Governor Obaseki presented a forged certificate to seek re-election in the Edo State governorship election held on September 19, 2020.

    According to the plaintiffs, the said document was purportedly issued by the University of Ibadan, while the governor presented same to Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) which conducted the poll.

    Before Justice Mohammed delivered the judgement in the suit, counsels to both parties in the matter had closed their cases after they presented witnesses and evidence to the court.

    During proceedings on Thursday, lawyer to the Plaintiffs, Akin Olujimi, adopted his final written address.

    He urged the court to affirm their position that the governor presented a forged certificate to the electoral umpire and was unfit to occupy the office.

    This was, however, rejected by Governor Obaseki’s counsel, Ken Mozia, who asked the court to dismiss the suit over what he described as the plaintiff’s failure to prove their case.