Contrary to what some people have been saying, you don’t necessarily need a high school diploma to get... - Kperogi
As the 2023 elections draw near, media scholar, Farooq Kperogi, on Wednesday, June 29, 2022, questioned why Bola Tinubu, presidential candidate of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), did not participate in the mandatory National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) scheme even when he was eligible to do so.
Kperogi has probed further, asking why the APC chieftain did not participate in the mandatory NYSC when he was younger than 30 at the time he earned his bachelor’s degree.
“People who’re questioning Tinubu’s Chicago State University degree are barking up the wrong tree.
“A Bola Ahmed Tinubu indeed graduated from there after earning a 2-year community college diploma from Richard J. Daley College in Chicago (Whether that Bola A. Tinubu is the same as the APC presidential candidate is another matter).
“Contrary to what some people have been saying, you don’t necessarily need a high school diploma to get admission to a college in the US.
“You can present scores from the General Educational Development (GED) tests (which is a test that adults who didn’t attend or complete high school take) in place of a secondary school certificate. It’s similar to Nigeria’s external GCE.
“Plus, not having a primary or secondary school certificate doesn’t disqualify anyone from running for office in Nigeria if you can present a higher qualification. The constitution merely states a minimum qualification. If you have a higher qualification than the minimum, you don’t need to present evidence for the minimum.
“Note that this isn’t about Tinubu’s previous perjury. He’d falsely claimed under oath in his 1999 INEC forms that he attended St. Paul Primary School, Aroloya, Lagos; Government College, Ibadan; and the University of Chicago.
“Can a previous perjury that had been dismissed by the courts on technical grounds be a basis to disqualify him years after the fact? Where are the lawyers?
“Well, I think it would be more productive for Tinubu’s critics to question why he didn’t serve in the mandatory National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) after his degree in 1979. He didn’t indicate in his current INEC form that he participated in the NYSC. Nor did he in his 1999 INEC form,” Kperogi said.
“His transcripts at the Chicago State University and Daley College show that he was born in 1952, which means he was 27 when he earned his bachelor’s degree. He was required by law to enroll in the NYSC since he was younger than 30 at the time.
“Although a June 26, 2019, Abuja Federal High Court judgement said candidates for elective political office can’t be disqualified from participating in elections for failure to participate in the NYSC, finding out whether or not Tinubu enrolled in the program might offer a clue to the mystery around his curious life story.
“But unmasking him won’t get him off the ballot. The best—or worst—that people who don’t like him can do is to not vote for him in 2023.”
Tinubu has been in the news lately over alleged falsification of his EC9 form published by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) when he claimed that he did not attend both primary and secondary school.
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