LIKE UCHE NNAJI, LIKE DAPO ABIODUN: THE CERTIFICATE FORGERY SCANDAL STORY

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The recent spectacular implosion of Uche Nnaji’s ministerial career is not an anomaly; it is a symptom. It is the logical endpoint of a political culture that has divorced integrity from power and rewarded audacious falsehood over mundane truth. Nnaji, the now-former Minister of Innovation, Science and Technology, did not merely fudge a date or exaggerate a grade. He allegedly constructed an entire academic edifice from thin air, a university degree from the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, and an NYSC discharge certificate, documents so brazenly fictional they would be comical were their implications not so grave.

The laws of the land, as meticulously outlined in the wake of his downfall, are unequivocal. The Criminal Code Act, the Penal Code, the Miscellaneous Offences Act, they form a trident of justice, prescribing penalties ranging from three years to a staggering twenty-one years, even life imprisonment, for the crime of forgery.

The legal framework exists, a cage built to contain such beasts of deception. Yet, one must ask: what is the weight of a law that is only invoked in the wake of a journalist’s exposé? What is the moral burden of a system that allows a man to sit in the highest councils of governance, a living perjury, until a newspaper forces his hand to resign?

Nnaji’s case is a clean, clinical amputation. A festering limb of corruption was identified and, under intense public glare, severed. But the body politic remains sick, hosting a more complex and metastatic cancer. This brings us to the case of Prince Dapo Abiodun, the Governor of Ogun State, a case not of a single, exposed forgery, but of a chameleonic relationship with his own biography.

Here is a man who seems to treat his personal history as a draft document, subject to endless revisions. What is the foundational truth of a leader who cannot, or will not, settle on a single narrative of his own genesis? He has been linked to Christ School, Ado-Ekiti and Ondo Boys High School. He has claimed affiliations with the prestigious University of Ife (now Obafemi Awolowo University) and the foreign halls of Kennesaw University. This is not a simple discrepancy; it is a profound existential fluidity. Which version of Dapo Abiodun does the people of Ogun State owe their allegiance to? The one from Ado-Ekiti or the one from Ondo? The Ife graduate or the Kennesaw alumnus?

The spectre of his West African Examinations Council (WAEC) certificate is particularly damning. That an official of the examination body could appear before an election petition tribunal and fail to tender the governor’s certificate is a moment of high political farce. It is a silence that screams. When his opponent, Ladi Adebutu, alleged that Abiodun presented a forged WAEC certificate to INEC, it was not a mere political barb; it was an arrow aimed at the very heart of the governor’s legitimacy.

The legal shield that protects a sitting governor from prosecution is a constitutional folly that has become a sanctuary for the allegedly corrupt. It creates a class of untouchables, a political noblesse who are immune to the consequences that swiftly engulf a mere minister like Nnaji. The Supreme Court’s wisdom that a governor can be investigated and prosecuted upon exit is a cold comfort to the citizens of Ogun State, who are today governed by a man whose foundational story is shrouded in deliberate ambiguity.

This, then, is the true moral burden: not just on the individuals who commit the act of perjury, but on the system that winks at it. We have created a political marketplace where the currency is not competence or character, but the ability to craft and sustain a compelling fiction. The oath taken before God and man is reduced to a ceremonial recitation, the cross on the affidavit a mere decorative squiggle. The message it sends is corrosive: that in Nigeria, a lie, if told with enough confidence and backed by enough power, can become the truth.

The brilliance of this deception is its banality. It is not the stuff of John le Carré novels; it is the mundane fraud of a photocopier, a scanner, and a willing accomplice in a back-alley printing shop. It is the dexterity of a forger’s hand, not a statesman’s vision. And in elevating these fabricators, we mock the millions of young Nigerians who burn the midnight oil, who sit for examinations without a ‘special centre’, who struggle through the very real rigours of the NYSC scheme. We tell them that their genuine efforts are worthless in the face of a well-executed fake.

Uche Nnaji’s resignation is not a victory for justice; it is a testament to the power of investigative journalism. Dapo Abiodun’s lingering cloud of doubt is not a mere political challenge; it is a festering wound on the face of our democracy.

About Dons Eze

DONS EZE, PhD, Political Philosopher and Journalist of over four decades standing, worked in several newspaper houses across the country, and rose to the positions of Editor and General Manager. A UNESCO Fellow in Journalism, Dr. Dons Eze, a prolific writer and author of many books, attended several courses on Journalism and Communication in both Nigeria and overseas, including a Postgraduate Course on Journalism at Warsaw, Poland; Strategic Communication and Practical Communication Approach at RIPA International, London, the United Kingdom, among others.

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