Ogun 2019: APC Governorship Candidate in Certificate Scandal


in Ogun State, the Apc Governorship candidate has been caught in a messy scandal that could see him disqualified as flag-bearer of the ruling party in the March 2, 2019 gubernatorial election.

Abiodun, an oil and gas executive from Ijebu Remo, is facing allegations that he evaded national service after graduating from the university in the 1980s, and claimed in his nomination form that he does not have a university degree in order to deceive his party and Independent National Electoral Commission, according to court filings seen by our correspondents.

Documents also show that Abiodun made conflicting academic claims in his INEC filings when he ran for Senate in 2015 and as a governorship candidate this year.

Abiodun was declared winner of the 2018 governorship primaries in Ogun State in October.

His emergence sparked a bitter and unending confrontation between leadership of APC led by Mr Adams Oshiomole and Mr Ibikunle Amosun, governor of Ogun State.

Amosun, also of APC, strongly contested Abiodun’s candidacy, and vowed last week that he would work against the candidate in 2019.

Although Amosun remained in APC, his favoured successor has abandoned the party with other topshots to test their ambitions elsewhere.

Abiodun, however, insisted that the governor would have no choice but to remain in APC and work towards his emergence.

But while Amosun’s stiff resistance to Abiodun’s ambition may be considered too daunting to surmount, the latest revelations about the candidate’s failure to take part in the youth service and misrepresentation of himself before INEC appear to have the bigger potential to undo him.

This is primarily because APC had indicated in September that it would not condone any member who failed to serve the country after finishing from the university.

The party asserted its zero tolerance for NYSC deflection when it disqualified communications minister Adebayo Shittu late September.

A week earlier, this newspaper had exposed Mr Shittu’s failure to serve after graduating from the university in the 1970s.

A spokesperson for APC did not return requests for comments on whether or not the party would equally disqualify Abiodun or wait for the court to do so.


Making the case

Mr Adesina Baruwa, who filed the suit against Abiodun at Abuja Division of Federal High Court, argued that the politician should be disqualified for claiming in his INEC form that he does not have a university degree.

The litigant said the politician clearly violated both the electoral law and NYSC law, which respectively prohibit filing false claims and failure to take part in youth service after graduation before age 30.

Abiodun was born on May 29, 1960. He had concluded his primary education in 1971 and his secondary education in 1978.

Abiodun said in his 2015 INEC filings that he obtained a bachelor’s degree in accounting in 1989, meaning he graduated at 29 and should have honoured a call-up for NYSC.

It is even possible that the politician had a degree before 1989 — a website said he obtained a degree in civil engineering at Obafemi Awolowo University, although no year was stated.

But Abiodun’s official profile on the website of Heyden, perhaps his most famous and successful business, also confirmed he obtained degrees in engineering and accounting.

But in his latest submission to INEC for his 2019 governorship run, Abiodun did not disclose his university degree, claiming high school as his highest academic qualification.

Abiodun seemed to have learnt from the scandals involving Shittu and the former finance minister Kemi Adeosun, who resigned her position after this newspaper revealed she forged a certificate to claim she was exempted from the youth service.

NYSC law requires every Nigerian who attended university or polytechnic to participate in the national youth scheme for one year after graduation, provided the person finished before age 30.

Failure to serve would prohibit such individual from gainful employment in Nigeria, and making false claims about serving could attract long jail term.

Also, anyone who graduated before 30 but deliberately declined to serve has committed an offence that could attract imprisonment, even if the person did not forge NYSC documents.

Only a person who obtained a degree after 30 or served in the military or won national honours medal would qualify for exemption certificate under NYSC law.

Having earned a bachelor’s degree at 29, assuming the account degree of 1989 was his first, Abiodun, in conformity with Section 2 of NYSC Act, should have participated in the year-long national service. He will not be qualified for exemption under the law..

Baruwa said Abiodun has violated the electoral law and NYSC Act by filing false claims and should be disqualified.

A spokesperson for INEC did not immediately return requests seeking comments.

Abiodun did not also return calls and text messages seeking comments for this story.

No comments