Certificate scandals: How alleged forgery continues to haunt Nigerian politics

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LagosPolice

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Oct 14, 2020
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Over the years, several politicians have faced scrutiny, lawsuits and public criticism over claims that their educational credentials were falsified or misrepresented.

Recently, the committee set by the federal government found Uche Nnaji, former minister of innovation, science and technology guilty of certificate forgery scandal.

Since Nigeria’s return to democratic rule in 1999, the controversy of forged or questionable certificates has become a recurring cankerworm.

Allegations of certificate forgery have been made against both elected officials and appointees, ranging from state governors and lawmakers to ministers and even presidential candidates.

In fact, Nigerians have adopted a detrimental attitude to certificate forgery among politicians to the extent of insisting that it does not matter if one has a genuine certificate, provided he or she is from our tribe, he is the best.
 
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Over the years, several politicians have faced scrutiny, lawsuits and public criticism over claims that their educational credentials were falsified or misrepresented.

Recently, the committee set by the federal government found Uche Nnaji, former minister of innovation, science and technology guilty of certificate forgery scandal.

Since Nigeria’s return to democratic rule in 1999, the controversy of forged or questionable certificates has become a recurring cankerworm.

Allegations of certificate forgery have been made against both elected officials and appointees, ranging from state governors and lawmakers to ministers and even presidential candidates.

In fact, Nigerians have adopted a detrimental attitude to certificate forgery among politicians to the extent of insisting that it does not matter if one has a genuine certificate, provided he or she is from our tribe, he is the best.
It’s really worrying how often these issues keep coming up. Leadership should be built on integrity and accountability. When people start ignoring serious issues like certificate forgery just because of tribe or political loyalty, it weakens public trust and the standards we expect from those in power.
 
Over the years, several politicians have faced scrutiny, lawsuits and public criticism over claims that their educational credentials were falsified or misrepresented.

Recently, the committee set by the federal government found Uche Nnaji, former minister of innovation, science and technology guilty of certificate forgery scandal.

Since Nigeria’s return to democratic rule in 1999, the controversy of forged or questionable certificates has become a recurring cankerworm.

Allegations of certificate forgery have been made against both elected officials and appointees, ranging from state governors and lawmakers to ministers and even presidential candidates.

In fact, Nigerians have adopted a detrimental attitude to certificate forgery among politicians to the extent of insisting that it does not matter if one has a genuine certificate, provided he or she is from our tribe, he is the best.
As someone who studies systems and incentives, I often remind people that leadership quality eventually reflects in economic outcomes.

When integrity becomes negotiable at the top, institutions weaken, and weak institutions always show up in the economy: poor policies, unstable markets, and reduced investor confidence.

For a country to build lasting prosperity, competence and integrity must matter more than tribe or loyalty. When we lower the bar for leadership, we ultimately lower the ceiling for national progress.