…Urges Mr President To Stop Making Excuses For His Failure
Phrank Shaibu, the media aide to the 2023 presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Atiku Abubakar, has tackled the coordinator of Tinubu Presidential Legal Team (TPLT), Babatunde Ogala, on the release of the academic records of the President Bla Tinubu.
Naija News reported that the US District Court for the Northern District of Illinois ordered the Chicago State University (CSU) to release the academic records of President Tinubu.
Atiku had approached the court seeking to compel the university to release Tinubu’s records on the grounds that the documents would strengthen his suit challenging the president’s electoral victory.
On September 19, a US Magistrate Judge, Jeffrey Gilbert, granted the request and ordered CSU to release Tinubu’s academic records within 24 hours.
However, the president moved to block it by filing an appeal against the order, but a federal judge, Justice Nancy Maldonado, overruled Tinubu’s objections and ordered CSU to release the president’s academic records.
In his reaction to the ruling, Ogala said the academic records of President Tinubu would not be admissible in the Supreme Court for the purpose of prosecuting the outcome of the 2023 presidential election.
Ogala said the documents from the institution are valueless at this point in time, stressing that the president attended CSU.
Responding to Ogala’s claims, Shaibu wondered why Tinubu moved to block the release of his academic records if the release of the documents was meaningless and valueless.
He also questioned why the president appealed the release of his academic records if he did not have anything to hide.
He said: “Ogala claimed that the victory was meaningless. So, why did his principal try to block the release of his credentials if he had nothing to hide? Why did he also appeal the initial judgment?
“The Bible says only the wicked run when no one chases them.
“Why has Tinubu been blocking the release of his academic records for nearly 30 years?”
Also, he stated that Tinubu failed to announce an increase in the minimum wage, following the decimation of the naira, in the aftermath of petrol subsidy removal.
He argued that Tinubu’s excuse for not increasing the wage shows that he put the cart before the horse.
Atiku urged the president to stop making excuses for his failure.
According to him, “Many workers were hopeful that minimum wage would be announced today. However, what Tinubu decided to do was to add an allowance of N25,000 ($25) to the lowest paid workers for six months only. This is a man who is not in sync with the current realities that the people are living in.
“He claimed he refused to increase the minimum wage in order not to worsen the inflation rate. If he cared so much about the inflation rate, he ought to have planned properly before removing the petrol subsidy and forcing the Central Bank to embark on a failed exchange rate unification policy which has not been backed by a corresponding boost in exports
In effect, Tinubu put the cart before the horse, and now that the horse has trampled on the cart, he is making excuses for his own incompetence. This is shameful.”
Atiku, while stating that the removal of fuel subsidy was not an achievement, but rather what was done with the savings, berated Tinubu for describing himself as an achiever for removing subsidy and for saying that subsidy ought to have been removed earlier.
He noted that the President was one of the loudest voices against subsidy removal back in 2012 when the Goodluck Jonathan administration decided to remove it.
“Tinubu should bury his face in shame for criticising former presidents for retaining subsidies. Here is a man who described petrol increase back in January 2012 as ‘Jonathan tax’ when subsidy was removed at the time.
“Tinubu told Jonathan to go after the oil thieves rather than Nigerians. Let Tinubu also be brave enough to expose and prosecute the so-called subsidy thieves he loves to reference in every speech. Let Tinubu also be man enough to apologise for sponsoring protests in Lagos back in 2012 over subsidy,” he added.