•President Bola Tinubu
I welcome the recently delivered judgment of the US District Court ordering the release of Tinubu’s records by tomorrow.
This is how things work in really independent countries. Courts are not coercive instruments of colonial mentality, the politically connected or the powerful. If they could indict their immediate past president on 91 counts and jail three successive governors of Illinois then you know they’re serious.
The fact that Tinubu escaped justice in Nigeria since 1999 (24 years) on his serial falsehoods and forgeries is a damning indictment on the chronic dysfunction and failure of our legal system. How ironic it occurred on our faux Independence Day. The truth is that a mafiosi who kidnapped Lagos state and its 20 million inhabitants has managed to kidnap Nigeria and it’s 200 million citizens. Nigeria is anything but independent. Even the British won’t dare to do the brazen things people are getting away with in Nigeria today. Once again, a foreign court is coming to Nigeria’s rescue – ironically the same court who’s judgment 30 years ago gave us an early warning on the nature of character we were dealing with. This time around, we shall see if our legal system will yet again fail our democracy, constitution, citizenry and posterity. When our systems get it right, we will not be subjected to such global embarrassment.
It should be noted that 75% of Tinubu’s academic claims have been disproven as bogus by Tinubu himself in two contradictory INEC forms. CSU is the last one. He should happily allow the records release to prove he is not a total fraud.
Similarly that the court gave a Monday 2nd October 2023 deadline warning that any request for stay of this judgement from Tinubu will be denied shows how abuse of court process is not tolerated. Note that this is a US Federal District court, the equivalent of our Federal High Court saying they will NOT stay their own judgment for Tinubu’s sake. Nigerian courts should begin to desist from allowing losing parties to stop their own judgments and let appellate courts decide on stays.
Finally, this is an “independence” day gift to Nigerians who yearn for good governance outside the hands of corrupt and criminal elements.
•Emmanuel Ogebe, Esq,
Washington USA