It does seem that when a politician is popular people overlook
his sins and when he becomes unpopular they want to examine his faults. In
2015, the Buhari-mania and its mantra of Change would not allow anyone
examine the matter of Buhari’s certificate but it does seem that with the turn
of events, those who were ready to accept recharge card and NEPA bill in place
of a certificate are insisting they want to see the real certificate.
Those who regularly respond to calls for
proposals in the humanitarian and development sector know that one of the first
places you must read through are the guidelines for application. These are more
or less criteria for eligibility. If among the things required are audited
reports for five years and you are only four years old as an organization, you
simply know ipso facto that your organization is disqualified; and if they
require only a ten paged summary and you go ahead to make it fifteen, or they
want an anti-terrorism certification attached and you forget to, or attach only
two out of three required letters of support from established organisations,
then you must already know you are out, being that the first step is to prune
the applications and without even reading the proposals, screen out those who
had not met the criteria.
When in 2015 social media were awash with the reaction of Nigerians with regard to the school certificate of General Muhammadu Buhari the notable and funniest ones were “Even if Buhari presents recharge card as his certificate, I will vote for him” and “Even if he presents NEPA bill as his certificate, I will vote Buhari.” This went to show how the younger generation of Nigerians had such faith in Buhari that they would overlook all required criteria just to make a change from the Jonathan presidency. Underlying the humour and sarcasm however was an implication that something must be attached at least, whether recharge card or NEPA Bill.
*WAEC Registrar presents certificate to Pres Buhari |
When in 2015 social media were awash with the reaction of Nigerians with regard to the school certificate of General Muhammadu Buhari the notable and funniest ones were “Even if Buhari presents recharge card as his certificate, I will vote for him” and “Even if he presents NEPA bill as his certificate, I will vote Buhari.” This went to show how the younger generation of Nigerians had such faith in Buhari that they would overlook all required criteria just to make a change from the Jonathan presidency. Underlying the humour and sarcasm however was an implication that something must be attached at least, whether recharge card or NEPA Bill.
As at that time I wondered why that should
be an issue whereas Buhari had contested the elections thrice but Ozokhome
(SAN) explained that previously the law required candidates only to mention
their qualifications. So up till the 2011 elections there was no issue with
regard to Buhari’s certificate; he could simply have claimed that he had a PhD
and not be liable as such; the legislature, for obvious reasons amended the law
and required that candidates show evidence of their credentials and according
to Mike Ozekhome (SAN), “equivalent” meant NECO, GCE, London GCE, etc. So the
matter ought to be very simple. If Buhari has a school certificate or its
equivalent he ought to bring it forward and attach.
But the question is, do we go on making
inconsequential noises? Do we sincerely expect INEC to be independent enough to
insist on this criterion when it is a sitting president that is involved ? Do
we expect Buhari and the APC to obey a court order restraining Buhari from
contesting the 2019 presidential elections ? It is laughable. After all Buhari
has attended many military courses, courses equivalent to tertiary and perhaps
even post graduate studies, and then rose to the rank of a general.
What appears contradictory is that the whole
basis of the campaign of the ruling government has been a new Nigeria, a
Nigeria of integrity, exemplified and embodied in the integrity of the
president against the supposed corruption of other major contenders; it becomes
a very sensitive issue to not meet a criterion as simple as showing one’s
school certificate! If truly Buhari cannot present his school cert it raises
questions about his integrity much more than that of any other candidate for
the office, as his integrity is a major plank. The revelation by the army in
2015 that it had neither the original nor certified true copies of Buhari’s
credentials raised a further question of a false claim, although the army
reversed itself later.
There have been write ups recently
purportedly coming from the army explaining why there is no certificate on
social media but I cannot trust this. But does Buhari not really have those
credentials ? If an examination body issued the certificate, are the records
not available ? And if he didn’t sit for those exams and claimed to have those
papers, isn’t that a monumental fraud at a period people had not even opened
their eyes to such practices ?
To be honest whether Buhari had his school
cert or not makes not much difference to the improvement in governance. However
for the future, in a country of 188 million Nigerians, I sincerely believe we
have gone past the era when anyone would superintend over the affairs of this
country who did not pass through the walls of a university or its equivalent.
Since our laws have so drastically reduced it to the level of school
certificate, the least I would expect as a citizen of this country is for that
simple eligibility criterion to be met.
We were all here when the younger Buhari and
former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Salisu Ibrahim Buhari, was
exposed with regard to his Toronto certificate. Before then it was common for
anyone to make a claim of having studied abroad and to show a certificate for
it. Since Salisu Buhari’s exposure, the tendency to make false claims may have
reduced. I would rather the senior Buhari came out plainly that he had no such
certification than allow the plank of integrity which he stands on to collapse
under him.
What could pose a threat is that the
scenario is different. In 2015 Goodluck Jonathan conceded. What if Buhari is
declared winner and the opposition goes to court to say he was not qualified to
run in the first place and since courts make their rulings based on available
laws and evidence, what if the supreme court decides that he isn’t actually
qualified? Can we imagine the turmoil that could arise if Buhari decides to
remain in power for “national security” interests which according to him are
superior to rule of law?
Maybe a leeway is to look at the intention
of the law. If the intention is to ensure that the minimum level of education
for a President should be school certificate, then it could probably be argued
that through experience and training, Buhari has exceeded that level. Maybe
that should help us to put behind this distraction of certificate. I would
rather Buhari was defeated at the polls than preempt a loss by disqualifying
him. If he has a certificate, he should attach it, if he does not have, let
that secret knowledge and the gnawing feeling of guilt be his punishment. But
let him contest and lose rather.
*Fr. Evaristus Bassey is the Director of
Church and Society at the Catholic Secretariat of Nigeria (CSN).
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