Tag: Uche Nnaji

  • Group urges UNN to release ex-minister’s certified records

    Group urges UNN to release ex-minister’s certified records

    The Joint Civil Society Front (JCSF), Enugu State, has urged the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) to release the certified academic records of former Minister of Science and Technology, Chief Uche Nnaji.

    ‎It called on the Vice Chancellor, Prof. Simon Uchenna Ortuanya, to step aside for an unfettered investigation into Nnaji’s allegation of records tampering.

    ‎At a briefing in Enugu, the group said the investigative panel set up by the Federal Ministry of Education should be allowed to do its work without interference.

    ‎Minister of Education Dr. Tunji Alausa had constituted the panel to unravel claims that the UNN authorities altered Nnaji’s academic records, a controversy that contributed to his resignation from the Federal Executive Council.

    ‎The group argued that for the investigation to be credible, the Vice Chancellor must step aside, noting that allowing an official under probe to remain in office could lead to interference, intimidation, and destruction of evidence or manipulation of records.

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    ‎“We insist that the principle of impartiality requires that any individual whose actions are the subject of an inquiry should be suspended while the investigation is ongoing,” JCSF Coordinator, Hon. Ani Vincent, said.

    ‎The group also raised concerns over what it described as UNN’s “abrupt shift” in position regarding Chief Nnaji’s graduation status.

    ‎It recalled that the university, through the Registrar, had confirmed in 2023 that Nnaji graduated from the institution—a position the registrar reportedly stood by despite pressure.

    ‎JCSF stressed that Nnaji’s resignation as minister was not an admission of wrongdoing but “a vote for transparency and respect for due process”, arguing that Prof. Ortuanya should similarly step aside or be suspended by the ministry.

    ‎The group stated that Nnaji had formally requested the university to release certified copies of his transcripts and academic records, urging the institution to meet its obligation to provide them.

    ‎“It is the responsibility of the Federal Ministry of Education, as the supervisory authority, to remove any obstruction that could impede the investigation,” Vincent added.

    ‎The organisation raised several questions it said Nigerians deserved answers to, including why UNN allegedly reversed its earlier confirmation of Nnaji’s graduation and how the records used by the Registrar in 2023 “suddenly vanished”.

    ‎According to JCSF, the investigative panel cannot work effectively while Prof. Ortuanya remains in office because “unfettered access to documents cannot be guaranteed”.

    ‎The group warned that if the Education Ministry fails to suspend the Vice Chancellor, it would mobilise mass protests across the Nsukka and Enugu campuses.

    ‎“This struggle is bigger than one man. It is about protecting the dignity of our universities, the future of our children, and the credibility of academic records in Nigeria,” the statement added.

    ‎The JCSF reaffirmed its demand for transparency, accountability and a university system free from political interference.

  • Alleged certificate forgery: UNN, VC, others fault ex-Minister Nnaji’s suit

    Alleged certificate forgery: UNN, VC, others fault ex-Minister Nnaji’s suit

    The University of Nigeria, Nsuka (UNN), the school’s Vice Chancellor2, Prof. Simon Ortuanya, and others have faulted a suit filed by a former Minister of Innovation, Science and Technology, Uche Nnaji, against the institution.

    In a notice of preliminary objection, UNN and its officials, named as defendants in the suit now before Justice Hauwa Yilwa of the Federal High Court in Abuja, prayed the court to strike out the suit for being statute barred.

    They also want the court to strike out the motion on notice for prerogative writs filed by the plaintiff because it is incompetent and wrongly commenced.

    The defendants in the suit are: the Minister of Education, the National Universities Commission (NUC), UNN, Ortuanya, the Registrar of UNN; a former acting Vice Chancellor, Prof. Oguenjiofor Ujam, and the Senate of the university.

    Nnaji filed the suit before his exit from office, following allegations of certificate forgery against him.

    At the mention of the case yesterday, Nnaji’s lawyer, Wole Olanipekun (SAN), told the court that the lawyer to the third to seventh defendants, Prisca Udoka (SAN), just served him the notice of preliminary objection few minutes before the commencement of proceedings.

    Olanipekun averred that the case was slated for hearing.

    The eminent lawyer said though he was ready for the proceedings, Udoka informed him that she would be filing a counter-affidavit.

    He said: “Shortly before my noble lord sat, my learner friend came to whisper to us that they would be filing their counter affidavit to the substantive application tomorrow.

    “Before then, we were just served with a notice of preliminary this morning. We want a date for definite hearing. We want to plead to my lord,” Olanipekun said.

    Justice Yilwa then adjourned the case till January 13, 2026 for hearing.

    She also ordered that hearing notices be issued to parties, who were not in court.

    The education minister and the NUC were not represented at yesterday’s sitting.

    In their objection, the third to the seventh defendants faulted the manner the suit was started, arguing that the plaintiff’s motion ex parte for leave was not filed within three months of the occurrence of the subject matter.

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    They said this was contrary to Order 34 Rule 4(1) of the Federal High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules 2019 and Section 2 (a) of the Public Officers Protection Act 2004, which rendered the proceedings incompetent and robbed the court of jurisdiction.

    “The substantive motion for prerogative orders was wrongly brought via a motion on notice instead of an originating motion, as stipulated under Order 34, Rule 5 (1) of the Federal High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules, 2019.

    “The application is incompetent, premature, speculative, since there has been no prior request or denial of release of academic records or any evidence of interference with the applicant’s academic records prior to the commencement of this action,” they said.

    The defendants also argued that the Federal High Court lacked the jurisdiction to entertain “matters concerning students’ academic records, examinations, results, and transcript, which are not proceedings arising from the administration or management of any agency within the exclusive jurisdiction in Section 251(1) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as amended) and where the internal remedy has not been exhausted and the Applicants’ fundamental rights has not been breached.”

    They also contended that no reasonable cause of action was disclosed against the third to seventh respondents, particularly the fourth respondent, Prof. Ortuanya, who they claimed acted solely in his official capacity as the VC of the UNN.

  • Alleged certificate forgery: UNN, VC, others fault suit by ex-Minister Nnaji

    Alleged certificate forgery: UNN, VC, others fault suit by ex-Minister Nnaji

    The University of Nigeria, Nsuka (UNN), the school’s Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Simon Ortuanya, and others have faulted a suit filed by a former Minister of Innovation, Science and Technology, Uche Nnaji.

    In a notice of preliminary objection, UNN and its officials named as defendants in the suit now before Justice Hauwa Yilwa of the Federal High Court in Abuja, want the court to strike out the suit for being statute barred.

    They also wanted the court to strike out the motion on notice for prerogative writs filed by the plaintiff on the grounds that it is incompetent and wrongly commenced.

    Defendants in the suit are the Minister of Education, the National Universities Commission (NUC), UNN, Ortuanya, the Registrar of UNN; a former acting Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Oguenjiofor Ujam, and the Senate of the university.

    Nnaji filed the suit, marked: ABJ/CS/1909/2025 before his exit from office, following allegations of certificate forgery involving him.

    At the mention of the case on Monday, Nnaji’s lawyer, Wole Olanipekun (SAN) told the court that the lawyer to the third to seventh defendants, Prisca Udoka (SAN) just served on him a notice of preliminary objection just few minutes before the commencement of proceedings.

    Olanipekun noted that the case was slated for hearing. He said he was ready , but said Udoka has informed him that she would be filing a counter affidavit.

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    He said, “Shortly before my noble lord sat, my learner friend came to whisper to us that they would be filing their counter affidavit to the substantive application tomorrow. 

    “Before then, we were just served with a notice of preliminary this morning. We want a date for definite hearing. We want to plead to my lord,” Olanipekun said. 

    Justice Yilwa then adjourned the case till January 13, 2026 for hearing.

    She also ordered that hearing notices be issued to parties, who were not in court.

    Education Minister and the NUC were not represented at Monday’s sitting.

    In their objection, the third to seventh defendants faulted the manner the suit was commenced, arguing that the plaintiff’s motion ex-parte for leave was not filed within three three months of the occurrence of the subject matter.

    They argued that this was contrary to Order 34 Rule 4(1) of the Federal High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules 2019 and Section 2 (a) of the Public Officers Protection Act 2004, which rendered the entire proceedings incompetent and rob this court of jurisdiction. 

    “The substantive motion for prerogative orders was wrongly brought by motion on notice instead of an originating motion as required under Order 34Rule 5 (1) of the Federal High Court (Civil Procedure) Rules, 2019. 

    “The application is incompetent, premature, speculative there being no prior request or denial of release of academic records or any evidence of interference with the applicant’s academic records prior to the commencement of this action,” they said.

    The defendants also argued that the FHC lacked jurisdiction to entertain “matters concerning student academic records, examinations, results and transcript, which are not proceedings arising from the administration or management of any agency within the exclusive jurisdiction in Section 251(1) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as amended) and where the internal remedy has not been exhausted and the Applicants’ fundamental rights has not been breached.”

    The contended that no reasonable cause of action was disclosed against the third to seventh respondents, particularly the fourth respondent, Prof. Ortuanya, who the claimed, acted solely in his official capacity as the VC of the UNN.

  • Nnaji certificate saga and the need to respect institutions

    Nnaji certificate saga and the need to respect institutions

    By Johnson Okolo

    Nigerians began the week on the note of a sizzling report by an online newspaper, Premium Times. The report centred around allegations that our own very Honourable Minister of Innovation, Science and Techonology, Chief Geoffrey Uche Nnaji, forged his university degree as well as National Youth Service Corp (NYSC) certificates.

    The reaction was instantaneous just as it was predictable. Outrage. And this was understable. Ever since Nigeria’s return to democracy in 1999, quite a number of high profile office holders have been caught in the web of one form of certificate forgery scandal or another.

    The distastful trend began in 1999 with two top principal officers of the National Assembly- Senate President Evan(s) Enwerem and the Speaker, House of Representatives, Salisu Buhari. While Salisu Buhari falsely claimed he attended the University of Toronto, Canada, senators- and indeed, Nigerians – couldn’t tell with certainty if their Senate President was Evan or Evans Enwerem.

    Ever since Evan or Evans Enwerem and Salisu Buhari, the issue of certificate forgeries has, like wild fire, caught up with members of the executive arm. For instance, Senator Douye Diri of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is governor of Bayelsa State today simply because of the discrepancies in the name of the All Progressives Congress (APC) deputy governorship candidate in the state, Senator Degi-Eremienyo. This was in February 2020.

    Five years earlier, Minister of Finsnce, Mrs Kemi Adeosun resigned her appointment following a scandal concerning the alleged forgery of her NYSC certificate. Ms. Adeosun had been invited by President Muhammadu Buhari to return from her base in the United Kingdom to join his government. It ended in disgrace.

    Instances abound of several other high profile Nigerians who have been enmeshed in forged certficate scandals. This naturally raises the question of if after 65 years of Independence, Nigeria has no institutions to block such embarrassment.

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    Enter the State Security Service (SSS) sometimes called Department of State Services (DSS).

    As far as the SSS Act is concerned, the Service is responsible for the internal security of Nigeria, VIP protection, and vetting of nominees for top positions. The SSS is also empowered to place persons of interest on watchlist- in addition to protecting the President from embarrassment (as in the cases of Salisu Buhari, Evan(s) Enwerem, Kemi Adeosun and now, Uche Nnaji) among other duties. Without mincing words, it is, safe to say that the SSS is a key institution of the Nigerian State.

    In her book, “Democracy: Stories from the Long Road to Freedom,”

    Condoleezza Rice, former national security adviser and secretary of state under President George W. Bush, believes that that institutions provide the bedrock for any successful democracy.

    In other words, weak institutions weaken democracy. Conversely, one of the ways to weaken democracy is to first weaken her institutions.

    One example that readily comes to mind on how we weaken an institution is the 2016 nomination of Ibrahim Magu as the chairman, Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC). The EFCC Act states that a nominee for the office of the EFCC chairman shall be screened by the Senate.

    Even though it is the President that apoints the SSS DG, the secret police wasn’t comfortable that the president chose Magu. And the secret police didn’t hide their disapproval of Mr. President’s nominee.

    In a letter dated October 3, 2016, to the Clerk of the Senate, the SSS told the senators that Magu was not fit to hold the position of EFCC chairman.

    The secret police listed several alleged malpractices against the EFCC boss, saying his confirmation would frustrate the anti-graft drive of the administration then.

    Part of the allegations against Magu was his being in possession of EFCC documents in his private residence during the chairmanship of Farida Waziri.

    The DSS also made reference to the circumstances surrounding Magu’s arrest, detention and suspension by the Nigeria Police.

    In addition, the secret service alleged that the sum of N40m was paid for the rented apartment, which costs N20m per annum, where Magu lived.

    DSS added that Magu’s accommodation was not paid for from the commission’s account but by a presidential appointee, who had been under investigation. The DSS alleged that after renting the apartment for Magu, the friend awarded a N43 million contract for the furnishing of the accommodation.

    The only consequence of the DSS report was that each time he faced the senators, they failed to clear him. Even at that, the President then snubbed the lawmakers and kept Magu as acting EFCC chairman for close to five years.

    Thus, Magu became the poster boy of the futility of security reports and Senate screening when political leaders and policy makers choose to weaken our institutions.

    While it is convenient to talk about Magu, perhaps mention should be made of our lawyers, especially those who aspire to make it to the peak of the bar, called Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SAN). Oftentimes referred to as Learned Silk, to demonstrate the highest esteem to which they are held, these senior lawyers recently grabbed the headlines when they opposed the screening of their colleagues shortlisted for this coveted rank by the DSS.

    A former Nigerian Bar Association General Secretary, Olumuyiwa Akinboro, himself a SAN, described the security vetting as an attack on the independence of the legal profession. Human rights lawyer and former Chairman of the National Human Rights Commission, Prof. Chidi Odinkalu was one of the few voices that supported the DSS.

    Odinkalu,who expressed surprise at Akinboro’s opposition, said the rule was introduced in 2022 by then Chief Justice of Nigeria, Olukayode Ariwoola, and had been applied to SAN conferments in 2022, 2023 and 2024 without protest.

    “These people are short of candour. The rules requiring screening of SAN candidates by DSS were made by Olukayode Ariwoola in 2022. They governed SAN conferment in 2022, ’23 & ’24,” noted Odinkalu.

    It has since emerged from the grapevine on the outcome of the DSS screening, that some of the nominees for the award of SAN are not fit and proper. Even with this DSS report, the same tainted nominees still managed to wangle their way to the swearing-in. They are now addressed as “learned silks!” Won’t be surprised if these SANs aren’t among those blaming the Senate and the DSS for “not doing a thorough job!”

    Now, to our own Minister Uche Nnaji. He resigned during the week. I’ve read and heard many people blame the Senate and the DSS for the lapses that made it possible to swear in Nnaji as Minister of Innovation, Science and Technology. Having set a dangerous precedent with Magu and many more that aren’t known, how are we sure the powers that be even allowed Nnaji to subject himself to the rigours of screening by the DSS? How are we sure he, in the name of security vetting, even stepped foot within the four walls of the SSS national headquarters in Abuja?

    The truth remains that over time, we failed to address the question of interference with institutions. Why should some governors, for instance, have the wherewithal to demand the deployment or removal of Police Commissioners to or from their states?

    Crying ourselves out won’t address the problem. We have to begin to address the issues that contribute to weakening our institutions. Without that, scandals like Nnaji’s will continue to dog our political trajectory and national life. It is hightine we rolled our sleeves to make out institutions strong. This, as Condoleezza Rice rightly noted,  will provide the bedrock for our successful democracy.

    •Okolo, a public affairs analyst, wrote from Umuahia

  • The intellectual complex…

    The intellectual complex…

    The former Minister of Innovation, Science and Technology, Chief Geoffrey Uche Nnaji recently resigned his appointment amidst the alleged certificates’ forgeries. He is alleged to have forged both a degree and National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) discharge certificate. While he claims to be stepping aside to give room for judicial processes, it is apposite to dig into reasons why the few cases of certificate forgeries in public service persists. With the return of democracy in 1999, the then Speaker of the House of Representatives, Salisu Buhari  was discovered to have claimed to have graduated from the University of Toronto and altered his age to qualify for the constitutional age to be a house member.

    He was subsequently prosecuted and convicted. He was later pardoned by the late Buhari administration and even honoured with being a Chancellor of a University. Many are still scratching their heads for the reasons behind such actions. A former minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun was equally discovered to have submitted a fake NYSC exemption later and she subsequently resigned.

    There have been outrage across the country about this recent alleged scandal involving Chief Nnaji. On his part, he struggled after the media exposure to communicate with the public. His so called PR consultants seem to have made matters worse by declaring that their principal was a victim of political blackmail. Whether their arguments helped their principal in any way remains to be seen as events unfold.

    Nigeria is a developing country. There would always be pitfalls and challenges but efforts must be made by the citizens and the institutions to reduce to the barest minimum instances that derail development.  There must be a decision by the people to change certain socio-cultural fixations. The lust for titles, certificates and all forms of tags must be addressed. It is good to achieve certain academic or traditional goals but they must be earned as in the days of yore. There must be a return to the era where integrity, meticulousness and hard work matter.

    Why do humans, including Nigerians try to access certain positions and qualifications they have done little or nothing to achieve? Why do people pursue titles even when they have not earned them legitimately? Why do people take short cuts to academic qualifications, why do people pay money to be given traditional or religious titles in some instances? How do these all impact development?

    The Roundtable Conversation sought the views of one of Nigeria’s most accomplished actors who is as cerebral as she is a woman of many accomplishments in many fields; journalism, cosmetology, TV  and photography. She is popularly referred to as the matriarch of the Nigerian very vibrant film industry. According to her, at 84, she has seen a bit of the Nigerian socio-cultural and political metamorphosis to understand why.

    She says that Nigeria is a beautiful and highly gifted country but the humans have to decide how the country develops or sinks. Addressing the issues of certificate forgeries generally and other forms of examination malpractices, she feels the people must have a deep introspection. She points out that intellectual bankruptcy is reason some people belief they need certain tags or titles to be recognized. Logically, when you do well, when integrity matters to you, your output both on a personal and professional level gives you the requisite recognition, influence and power.

    “I am simply Taiwo Ajai-Lycett”. This she says means that no tag precedes or follows her name but that does not diminish her status or achievements in the fields she had ventured into all her life. “My simple name is my passport to anywhere in the world.  What this means is that when you want a certain status of power and influence, you work hard for it. I have worked hard and I have earned my flowers without having to forge any certificates”.

    She believes that people must decide what parts to choose on their way to achieving fame and fortune. The idea that some parents and other adults get involved in exam malpractices on behalf of their children or even for themselves is very telling of the lack of intellectual depth and altruistic aspirations. There is a growing incident of anti-intellectualism and this is affecting both the political and socio-economic lives of the nation. There is an increasing pursuit of status and power in different forms, political, social and even religious. These powers when acquired even if falsely elevates the humans involved and when the society refuses to hold the guilty accountable, it often spirals out of control. The logical sequence of events used to be that people struggle to be of impeccable moral character as that attracted respect and reverence in some cases. Today, the values seems to have changed and there seems to be a certain ‘fast-foodlike’ attitude to getting ahead in life in ways that points to, ‘the end justifies the means’ social mantra.

    She recalls that in the past, intellectualism was admired and that does not mean it comes only through academic achievements. Intellectualism in its purest sense is devotion to the exercise of intellect which comes from well-thought out processes of ideas, knowledge and information. So the fact that some people feel that they can have short-cuts to real success is what feeds the hunger to try to skip due process either academically or socially in the case of those who use money to influence titles or positions of authority and influence in the society.

    The society must begin to purge itself of honouring misfits. This is why people love to acquire titles and cheat their ways to positions they won’t ordinarily be given. There is a local saying that ‘a good name is better than silver and gold’. No one ever said that a good title or position is anything to be proud of. So according to Ajai-Lycett, the craving to be addressed as; Excellency, Honourable, Distinguished, Professor, Dr. and other appellations seems to be at the root of people seeking validation and power.

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    She says that each society through the values they espouse often impacts on the kind of development that becomes achievable.  The idea of exaggerated self-importance with little cerebral content might work against development. The fact that certain values have been eroded would continue to fuel deviations from the right parts. A Chief Nnaji, if the allegations are true must have gone that route because he wanted the power the position he was nominated for brings. He must have believed that he is in a system where due diligence is lacking and might have gotten away with his alleged forgeries.

    The system must have a re-orientation and the society must get back to the values that empowers societies. There is no perfection anywhere but positions of influence must not be for people without the intellectual pride to engage in the rigorous but rewarding route of knowledge acquisition, sharing and productivity.

    Dame Ajai-Lycett advised that though the media is trying in the development of the country being the 4th estate of the realm, care must be taken not to allow certain PR communicators to continue to present themselves as media professionals. She insists that they are at best commercial communicators who work with the media to project either the products or services of their clients. The media is responsible to the people and help in deepening the works of the executive, legislature and the judiciary.

    Public Relations practitioners must not be allowed to bastardize the value and work of the core media. The fact that they project their clients through the media does not make them media practitioners in the sense they often project themselves. She feels that it’s curious that when some of these scandals break, some PR consultants in defending their clients often posture as media practitioners which is misleading. The hallmark of journalism is objectivity, PR consultants are often very subjective.

    This alleged scandal is an indictment on the system generally. How did a whole Senate of Nigeria not scrutinize documents submitted by a ministerial nominee? The alleged discrepancies on the certificates were too obvious that the senators ought to have identified and pointed them out. The litany of screenings and confirmations by the senate since 1999 ought to have produced better developmental results if patriotism were on the cards. This alleged scandal is an indictment on the senate and other government agencies that had a hand in clearing the ex-minister. There must be more diligence in the ways things are done because everyone becomes the casualty when incompetence comes from public servants.

    In this case, if a nominee cannot be truthful with his qualifications and NYSC requirements, how sincerely can he serve the people of Nigeria? Again, there are suggestions that the constitution must be amended to upgrade the requirements for accessing public service. In many developed nations, the public service is the exclusive of many of the best qualified in character and learning. The value comes with the productivity of people who have lived lives o diligence and integrity. We must make a choice.

    •The dialogue continues…

  • Nnaji: Tinubu not aiding corruption, cover ups – Onoh

    Nnaji: Tinubu not aiding corruption, cover ups – Onoh

    The former Southeast spokesman for president Bola Tinubu Denge. Josef Onoh, has refuted the allegation by the Africa Democratic Congress (ADC) that the presidency aids cover ups for corruption.

    The ADC allegation arise from the former Minister for Innovation Science and Technology Chief Uche Nnaji, who resigned his appointment on Tuesday following certificates forgery allegation.

    The ADC painted a picture of the President’s sympathy for criminality weak response to integrity breaches, claiming that his acceptance Minister Nnaji’s resignation signals a troubling pattern of dishonesty within the APC. 

    But Onoh said that the ADC position amounts to political mischief, egregious and desperate attempt by a fringe opposition party to score cheap points amid their own irrelevance. 

    “Let me first clarify the timeline and substance of the Uche Nnaji affair, which the ADC conveniently glosses over in their rush to judgment. Uche Nnaji, nominated as Minister of Innovation, Science and Technology, faced scrutiny during his Senate confirmation hearings over discrepancies in his academic credentials. 

    “In a display of the self-correcting mechanisms inherent in our democratic institutions, verifications by the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) and the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) revealed that the certificates presented were not issued by these bodies. Crucially, Nnaji himself acknowledged this in court filings, demonstrating candor rather than concealment.

    “Rather than stonewall or defend the indefensible, a tactic all too familiar in opposition circles, Nnaji proactively tendered his resignation. President Tinubu, in line with his administration’s zero-tolerance stance on impropriety, accepted the resignation without delay. This was not a quiet shuffle or a backroom deal; it was a public affirmation that no one was above the law. 

    “Therefore, the ADC’s assertion that this acceptance gives an impression of sympathy is a figment of the party’s imagination untethered from reality. On the contrary, it underscores the President’s efficiency in removing unfit elements from public office, preventing further embarrassment to the nation.

    “To label this as a ‘cover-up’ is not just hyperbolic; it is defamatory. President Tinubu did not ‘let off the hook’ any official, he excised a problem at its root. The resignation itself triggered the necessary institutional reviews, including potential referrals to investigative bodies, all operating independently of the executive. This is governance that acts decisively, not one that drags the nation through protracted spectacles for political theater,” Onoh clarified.

    On the constitutional prerogative and the President’s authority in ministerial appointments and removals, Onoh rebuked ADC’s indignation, ignoring the clear delineations of power in Nigeria’s 1999 Constitution (as amended), which vests the president with explicit authority over the executive branch. 

    He quoted that under Section 147(1), the President “may, in his discretion, assign members of his administration to departments or ministries,” implying the corollary power to remove them when exigencies demand.

    “This discretion is not absolute but is bounded by the principles of good governance and accountability, which President Tinubu has consistently upheld.

    “Furthermore, Section 11 of the Third Schedule Part I, outlines the Senate’s role in confirmation but does not mandate executive retention post-confirmation if new facts emerge. The President’s acceptance of a resignation is a legitimate exercise of executive prerogative, akin to the “pleasure doctrine” under Section 141, which allows ministers to hold office at the President’s pleasure.”

    Onoh maintained that by accepting Nnaji’s resignation, President Tinubu invoked this authority to safeguard public trust, not evade it, noting that the Supreme Court affirmed such discretion in cases such as the A.G. Federation v. A.G. Lagos State (2013), emphasizing that executive actions in personnel matters must be reasonable and not arbitrary—criteria met here through prompt, transparent handling.

    He said that he ADC’s demand for the President to “take a tougher stance” beyond resignation betrays their misunderstanding of separation of powers, because the executive appoints and removes and does not prosecute. 

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    “That remit belongs to the judiciary and independent agencies like the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC). President Tinubu’s administration has empowered these bodies—evidenced by over 5,000 convictions under his watch since 2023—rather than micromanaging them for partisan gain.

    “Legal Framework on Forgery: Due Process Over Lynch Mob Justice, which presumably might be 

    The core of the ADC’s accusation hinges on forgery, a serious offense under Nigerian law. Yet, their portrayal of the President’s response as enabling impunity flies in the face of statutes that prioritize investigation over the presumption of guilt. Forgery is criminalized under Sections 465–467 of the Criminal Code Act (Cap. C38, LFN 2004), which defines it as making a false document with intent to defraud, punishable by up to 14 years imprisonment. For public officers, **Section 22 of the Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offenses Act, 2000** imposes additional liabilities for false declarations in official capacities.

    “However, conviction requires due process: investigation, arraignment, and trial, as enshrined in **Sections 35–36 of the 1999 Constitution**, guaranteeing fair hearing and presumption of innocence. 

    “The ADC’s call for immediate prosecution “if found guilty” conflates resignation with absolution—a strawman they erect to attack the President. Nnaji’s resignation does not immunize him; it merely shifts him from public office to private citizen status, where agencies like the EFCC can pursue charges unencumbered by executive privilege.

    “President Tinubu has a proven track record of referring such matters for prosecution. Recall the swift EFCC indictments in the Betta Edu and Halima Shehu cases earlier in 2025, both involving APC appointees. In Nnaji’s instance, reports indicate that the Attorney-General’s office has already flagged the file for review by relevant agencies. This is not “letting corrupt officials off the hook”—it is allowing the law to take its course, free from executive interference. 

    “The ADC’s alternative—executive-orchestrated “tough stances”—would violate **Section 4(8) of the Constitution**, which limits legislative oversight to appropriation, not prosecutorial direction.

    “Moreover, the ADC’s hypocrisy is glaring. As a party with its own history of internal scandals, including unresolved allegations against its leadership in the 2023 elections, they lecture on integrity from a glass house. Nigerians deserve better than opposition tantrums that erode institutions for fleeting headlines.

    “The ADC’s claim of a ‘troubling pattern’ of certificate scandals under the APC is a tired trope, selectively amnesiac about opposition figures who have faced similar scrutiny. President Tinubu’s credentials were rigorously vetted by the courts, including the Supreme Court in Buhari v. INEC (2008) and subsequent election petitions, affirming his eligibility. Under his leadership, the administration has digitized credential verification for all appointees via the National Identification Number (NIN) integration, a reform lauded by the World Bank in its 2025 Governance Report.

    “This is a government that has recovered over ₦2 trillion in assets through anti-corruption drives and implemented the Steve Oronsaye Report to prune bureaucratic bloat—actions that have saved billions. The Uche Nnaji episode is an aberration corrected swiftly, not a systemic flaw. By contrast, the ADC’s silence on their own governance failures, most especially within their party that they can’t control, speaks volumes.

    “In Conclusion, Trust in Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda

    Fellow Nigerians, especially in the Southeast where I proudly served as APC spokesman, the ADC’s statement is a smokescreen for their electoral frustrations. 

    “President Tinubu is not sympathetic to criminality; he is resolute against it, guided by constitutional fidelity and legal rigor. The Uche Nnaji resignation was a masterclass in accountable leadership: remove the unfit, empower institutions, and let justice prevail.

    “I call on patriotic Nigerians to reject this partisan noise and focus on the Renewed Hope Agenda—delivering infrastructure, security, and economic revival. To the ADC: Bring evidence, not echoes. To President Tinubu: Your steadfastness inspires us all.

    “Should further details emerge warranting investigation, rest assured the administration will act decisively. But for now, let us celebrate a president who governs by the book, not by the ballot’s bitterness,” Onoh said.

  • Nnaji and his accusers

    Nnaji and his accusers

    On Tuesday, Minister of Innovation, Science and Technology Uche Nnaji resigned amid his spirited defence of the allegations of forgery against him by Premium Times, an online newspaper. The resignation came as a surprise, considering how he, his aides and friends were returning fire for fire. Really, it is good that he resigned so that he can have enough time to face his accusers.

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    His resignation should not be the end of the matter. It should be the beginning of it. What the publication accused him of is criminal in nature. The paper has published its findings following its investigation. Nnaji is disputing the publication’s claims. Who is telling the truth? Who is lying? We will soon know as the matter is in court. Does that not amount to putting the cart before the horse?

    Why were the police not called in before the matter was taken to court? It would have been the appropriate thing to do because of the alleged crime. For now, all fingers are crossed as the public waits for Nnaji’s next move.

  • Uche Nnaji and the burden of forgery

    Uche Nnaji and the burden of forgery

    Sir: It was only a matter of time. Everyone paying close attention knew that Uche Nnaji, the former Minister of Innovation, Science, and Technology, could not survive the certificate forgery storm. The handwriting was on the wall, and yesterday, it finally happened. Nnaji bowed out.

    The truth is simple and damning: Nnaji himself admitted that the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) never issued him a degree certificate. So the million-naira question is, where did the one he brandished come from?

    UNN has washed its hands off the matter. The institution categorically stated that Nnaji never completed his studies and was never awarded a degree. In short, the certificate he paraded is fake.

    And that’s not all. The National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) has also distanced itself from Nnaji’s so-called NYSC certificate, describing it as “strange.” A Premium Times investigation revealed yet another oddity, Nnaji’s NYSC record shows that he supposedly served for 13 months. Thirteen months! Even the NYSC found that hard to explain.

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    Of course, Nnaji claims that political enemies are behind his ordeal. But even he knows the truth; no opponent can forge a certificate on your behalf. He laid the trap himself and walked right into it.

    Let’s remember the facts. Nnaji was admitted into UNN in 1981 to study Microbiology/Biochemistry and was expected to graduate in 1985. But he reportedly failed some courses and never graduated. That means for over 40 years, Uche Nnaji neither regularized his academic records nor obtained a valid certificate , yet he rose through political ranks, occupying sensitive positions and waving fake credentials. Nnaji was careless, so to speak

    Forty years of deception finally caught up with him. And this time, not even political connections could save him.

    But beyond Nnaji’s personal fall lies a bigger question, how many more “Nnajis” are out there, quietly occupying sensitive positions in government, hiding behind forged papers and political influence? Some commentators are beginning to say that Nnaji’s case might just be the tip of a very large iceberg.

    •Zayyad  I. Muhammad, Abuja.

  • NGOs seek ban on Nnaji from holding public office

    NGOs seek ban on Nnaji from holding public office

    Two civil society groups have called on the Federal Government to ban former Minister of Innovation, Science, and Technology, Uche Nnaji from holding public office.

    According to Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC) and HallowMace Foundation Africa, such an action will dissuade those planning to forge certificate in future.

    Nnaji, accused of using forged University of Nigeria Nsukka (UNN) Degree certificate and a fake National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) certificate, resigned from the Federal Executive Council (FEC) on Tuesday, having failed to defend his integrity.

    CISLAC and HallowMace called on the National Assembly to apologise to Nigerians for what it termed an international embarrassment arising from its institutional failure.

    In a telephone interview with reporters yesterday, the Executive Director of CISLAC, Auwal Ibrahim Musa (Rafsanjani), said that Nnaji was busy trading blames, when all material evidence had indicted him, hence, he should never be allowed to hold public office again.

    “He did not resign on his own volition. He was forced by the public, the media, and the civil society to resign. He didn’t resign as an honourable man. He actually went to court to stop the university from releasing his record. In fact, we should ban him from public office for life,” he stated.

    Also, in a statement jointly signed by its Executive Director, Anderson Osiebe, and its Head of Public Communications, Oguh Hyginus, HallowMace Foundation Africa maintained that the Nigerian public deserved transparent and accountable institutions that serve as effective gatekeepers against fraudulent public officers.

    “The sequence of events in Minister Nnaji’s case reveals catastrophic failures in the verification systems designed to prevent such occurrences.

    “According to the timeline of events, University of Nigeria Nsukka, UNN, clearly stated in May 2025 that they had no record of issuing a degree certificate to Nnaji in 1985, and this position was reaffirmed in October 2025. Why wasn’t this basic verification conducted during the screening process in 2023?

    “The leadership of screening institutions should issue public apologies to the Nigerian people for this grave failure of due diligence and outline concrete steps being taken to prevent recurrences.

    “If with their extensive resources and mandate, they could not authenticate a certificate from a Nigerian institution, what confidence can citizens have in their ability to vet appointees for critical national positions?” the civil society organisation stated.

    Nnaji: Why I resigned

    Nnaji said yesterday that his resignation was not an admission of guilt.

    He explained in a statement after Presidential Spokesman Bayo Onanuga made his exit from FEC public, that he did not want the controversy over his  alleged certificate to ‘’cast a shadow over the noble objectives of this administration.’’

    A part of the post reads: “This decision (resignation)  did not come lightly. Over the past week, an orchestrated, sustained campaign of falsehood, politically motivated, and malicious attacks has been waged against my person, integrity, and office across print, electronic, and social media platforms.

    “These unfounded allegations and media distortions have not only caused personal distress but have also begun to distract from the vital work of the Ministry and the Renewed Hope Agenda of Mr President.

    “As someone who has spent more than five decades building a reputation anchored on hard work, honour, and service to humanity, I cannot in good conscience allow these distractions to cast a shadow over the noble objectives of this administration.

    “My decision to step aside is therefore a personal choice — not an admission of guilt, but rather a principled decision to respect the sanctity of due process and to preserve the integrity of the judicial proceedings currently before the court. In the end, Justice will prevail, and history will vindicate the just.

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    “I remain deeply grateful to His Excellency, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, for the confidence he reposed in me and for the privilege to serve in his cabinet.’’

    Nnaji pledged his ‘’unflinching support’’  to the Tinubu administration and holding the President’s vision close to his heart.

    The statement drew immediate comments from some Nigerians who said they were astounded by his audacity.

    One of the commenters, DamianOfoegbu,  tweeted: The audacity to call himself an honourable minister.’’

    Another X user @CroBender, asked: “Guy, did you graduate or not? It’s as simple as that..”  

    Atiku calls for thorough screening 

     Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar also responded to the forgery saga, saying the Department of State Services (DSS)  should be held liable for it. 

    Atiku, in a statement, argued that what should ordinarily be a matter of national shame was being disguised as a “voluntary resignation”.

    Atiku said Nnaji’s ‘’voluntary resignation was an attempt to whitewash him.

    The statement reads: “Let the truth be told: Uche Nnaji should not have been allowed the courtesy of resignation.

    “He should have been summarily dismissed and prosecuted for deceit and falsification.” The former Vice-President called for ‘’an independent, transparent, and comprehensive investigation into the academic and professional credentials of all members of the Federal Executive Council.’’

  • UPDATED: Nnaji resigns as Minister

    UPDATED: Nnaji resigns as Minister

    Embattled Minister of Innovation, Science and Technology, Uche Nnaji, has resigned from his position.

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu appointed Nnaji in August 2023.

    A statement by presidential aide, Bayo Onanuga confirmed Nnaji’s resignation.

    Onanuga said: “President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has accepted the resignation of Geoffrey Uche Nnaji, the Minister of Innovation, Science, and Technology, following some allegations against him.

    “He resigned today in a letter thanking the President for allowing him to serve Nigeria.

    “Nnaji said he has been a target of blackmail by political opponents.

    “President Tinubu thanked him for his service and wished him well in future endeavours.”

    The latest development followed a an investigative report, which alleged that Nnaji submitted forged academic and NYSC certificates to President Bola Tinubu and the Senate during his ministerial nomination process in 2023.

    The report claimed that the UNN disowned the degree certificate submitted by Nnaji, stating that although he was admitted in 1981, he did not complete his studies and was never awarded a degree.

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    The university’s Vice-Chancellor, Simon Ortuanya, confirmed this in a response to a Freedom of Information request dated October 2, in which he stated that Nnaji was not a graduate of the institution.

    This contradicted a December 2023 response from UNN’s Registrar, Celine Nnebedum, who had previously confirmed Nnaji’s graduation but later recanted before the Public Complaints Commission in 23 May 2025 letter that the university searched its graduation records for the 1985 session but could not find Nnaji’s name on them.

    The investigation also revealed that in a court affidavit, Nnaji admitted that the university never issued him a degree certificate and that he had “never collected one.”

    In September, Nnaji filed a lawsuit at the Federal High Court against the Minister of Education, the National Universities Commission, UNN, Vice-Chancellor Ortuanya, and others, seeking to restrain the university from “tampering” with his academic records.

    The case was heard on Monday, with Sebastian Hon (SAN) representing Nnaji, while E.M. Asogwa appeared for the university and its officials.