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Opinion

Ministers’ Certificate Forgery: A Scandal of Credentials, Cover-Up and Questions Unanswered

by Folarin Kehinde November 11, 2025
written by Folarin Kehinde

In recent weeks, Nigeria has witnessed a troubling sequence of events: two federal ministers from the Bola Tinubu-led administration Uche Nnaji and Olubunmi Tunji‑Ojo have found themselves at the centre of allegations of certificate forgery and irregular credentials.

The way the government has responded (or failed to respond) has raised sharp questions about integrity in public office, accountability and whether the rule of law applies equally to all.

Uche Nnaji

Uche Nnaji served as Minister of Innovation, Science & Technology. He was appointed in August 2023.

Investigative reporting by major media revealed that the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) could not confirm that Nnaji graduated in July 1985 as he claimed, though his submitted certificate said he did.

Further, the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) certificate he presented was similarly disputed.

For weeks, the government response was limited — the presidency said it would “act after court verdict.”

On 7 October 2025, President Tinubu accepted Nnaji’s resignation.

Legal commentary suggests that if forgery is proven, Nigerian law provides for serious sanctions — possibly up to life imprisonment in some cases.

Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo

Tunji-Ojo is the Minister of Interior (appointed in Tinubu’s administration).

Allegations emerged challenging the authenticity of his NYSC certificate: the certificate he presented said he completed service November 2019–2020 and was issued in February (later) and signed by a Director-General who only assumed office in January of the same year.

The NYSC, in response to FOI queries, stated the certificate was genuine but acknowledged unusual circumstances: Tunji-Ojo was first mobilised in 2006, “absconded,” then remobilised in 2019, and his certificate was printed in February 2023.

Civil society has called for the government to allow an independent probe by the Department of State Services (DSS) into the minister’s credentials, arguing that failure to investigate would undermine rule of law.

Hannatu Musawa – Minister of Art, Culture & Creative Economy

Hannatu Musawa, the Federal Minister of Art, Culture and Creative Economy in Nigeria, was embroiled in controversy over her National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) certificate and related service status.

In January 2024 the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), through its Public Interest & Development Law section, filed a suit against Musawa (and a music-promoter, Kenny Ogungbe) alleging their NYSC certificates were null and void and that Musawa had violated the NYSC Act.

The crux: the NYSC Act requires mobilisation for service by certain age thresholds and sets conditions for certificate validity; the plaintiffs argued Musawa, along with Ogungbe, were mobilised beyond age or otherwise outside the law.

In October 2024 Musawa responded publicly, denying wrongdoing, stating that her presence in office “means that I didn’t do anything wrong” and alluding to mis-reporting and misunderstanding of the facts.

What’s the Status of the Case?

The NBA suit, styled FCH/ABJ/05/90/2024, sought a declaration that Musawa was not entitled to hold public office because of alleged NYSC non-compliance.

In April 2024 the Federal High Court in Abuja dismissed the suit on procedural grounds: the claimants lacked legal standing. That means the court did not pronounce on the substance of the certificate/service issue itself.

Musawa remains in her ministerial role despite the controversy.

Why This Matters & The Bigger Picture

Compliance with NYSC service and proper certification is one of the formal eligibility conditions for many public offices in Nigeria. Allegations of falsified or invalid service/certificates strike at the heart of integrity in public appointments.

When a minister is accused of certificate or service irregularities, two major issues arise: (1) the efficacy of the screening and verification mechanism by appointing authorities; (2) the precedent it sets for accountability — are such allegations pursued until resolution, or do they fade away?

In Musawa’s case, while the suit was dismissed on standing (not on merits), the lack of a full public investigation or closing statement leaves questions unanswered. Many observers argue that unresolved credential controversies weaken public trust.

Musawa’s Response & the Government’s Reaction

Musawa publicly insisted on her innocence: “There have been so many different accounts… Social media has just run rife with different accounts.”

The government (through the appointment and retention) appears to have treated the matter as non-terminal: the minister continues to serve.

Critics argue the absence of decisive action — either dismissal, definitive investigation or public disclosure of findings — undermines the message that principle matters regardless of profile.

Key Questions Still Unanswered

Was Musawa’s NYSC mobilisation and certificate issuance lawful under the NYSC Act or not? The court did not adjudicate that.

Did the appointing/confirming agencies (e.g., Senate, DSS, NYSC) conduct full verification before she was appointed? If yes, why did the controversy arise?

If irregularities existed, what sanction or corrective mechanism would apply? And if none, why not?

What does this say about the enforcement of integrity standards for ministerial nominees in Nigeria?

Implications for Nigeria’s Public Service

These kinds of controversies highlight systemic weaknesses in how credentials are vetted and public officials are held accountable.

They also raise the question of whether the law is applied uniformly or whether political factors shield some individuals.

For citizens, unresolved cases like this erode confidence in public institutions and create cynicism about the rule of law and merit in public office.

What This Story Reveals

1. Credential Fraud Undermines Trust

When a public official presents a certificate that turns out to be questionable, it cuts to the heart of trust in governance. The position of a minister is not simply about policy; it symbolises the integrity of the state. The Nnaji case shows what happens when that symbolic trust is fractured.

2. Double Standards & Selective Enforcement

While Nnaji’s case resulted in a resignation, Tunji-Ojo’s matter remains unresolved and the government’s response far more muted. Civil society sees this as symptomatic of selective accountability – high profile flagships sometimes investigated, others allowed to linger.

3. Institutional Weaknesses in Vetting & Verification

Both cases expose weak mechanisms for verifying credentials in public appointments. That a nominee can present a certificate that later turns out to be suspect suggests gaps in screening by the presidency, Senate confirmation committee, NYSC, universities.

4. Legal Framework Exists — but Will It Be Used?

Nigerian law treats certificate forgery very seriously. Premium Times explains that under the Criminal Code or Penal Code, forgery can lead to up to 14 years or even life imprisonment if a seal is involved. Yet so far, no prosecution has been initiated in Nnaji’s case (beyond the resignation) and none has yet in Tunji-Ojo’s.

5. Politics, Reputation & Avoidance of Transparency

In Nnaji’s defence, he claimed the allegations were politically motivated, tied to a governorship ambition in Enugu State. The tone of the government’s engagement has been defensive rather than open. The Tunji-Ojo matter remains opaque.

Why the Government’s Silence over Tunji-Ojo Raises an Alarm

While Nnaji’s case was brought into the open and ended with resignation, Tunji-Ojo’s situation is being treated differently. Key points:

The NYSC’s reply to media queries was not fully explanatory; it admitted odd timing (certificate issued 2023 for service 2019–2020) but offered no full narrative.

The presidency has not announced any investigation or outcome in his case and there has been no public resignation or removal.

Civil society warns that if a minister with unresolved certificate questions remains in office without inquiry, it sends a message that performance takes precedence over integrity — or that certain individuals are above scrutiny.

Given that Nnaji resigned after public pressure and heavy media coverage, treating Tunji-Ojo’s matter differently suggests inconsistency.

The Human & Institutional Cost

For the public, there is a growing cynicism: if senior officials present questionable credentials and nothing happens (or happens only after pressure), citizens may conclude that the system is rigged in favour of the powerful.

For institutions (universities, NYSC, Senate, etc), each unresolved case diminishes their credibility. UNN’s letter to Nnaji that it didn’t issue his claimed certificate is a vivid example.

For good governance advocates, these cases become rallying points: the demand is not just for one person to be held accountable but for the process (vetting, verification, public transparency) to be institutionalised.

What Must Happen Now

1. Independent Investigation: The government should mandate an independent inquiry (possibly via the DSS or ICPC) into the Tunji-Ojo certificate matter — just as was effectively pressured into happening in the Nnaji case.

2. Public Reporting: Findings should be published. When left in limbo, suspicion grows even if one is innocent.

3. Reform Vetting Systems: The Senate confirmation process, presidential screening, institutional verification by agencies like NYSC and universities need to be strengthened and publicly transparent.

4. Clear Consequences: If forgery is proven, appropriate legal action must follow, so that the law does not apply in theory only but in practice.

5. Consistent Standards: The government must apply the same standard to all — regardless of ministerial portfolio, performance or political alignment. Integrity cannot be optional.

The twin cases of Uche Nnaji and Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo expose more than individual mis-deeds: they reveal a systemic problem of credentials and accountability in Nigeria’s public service.

Nnaji’s resignation might indicate progress, but the ambiguity surrounding Tunji-Ojo shows there is still much to do. Until transparency exists and the same rules apply to all, the confidence of citizens in their leaders will remain shaky — and the nation’s promise of ‘renewed hope’ will ring hollow.

 

 

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Headlines

Final-Year Thesis Now Compulsory Requirement for NYSC – FG

by Folarin Kehinde September 29, 2025
written by Folarin Kehinde

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has approved new regulations making the submission of academic thesis or project reports a mandatory requirement for mobilisation into the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC).

The directive, which takes effect from October 6, 2025, was conveyed through an enforcement circular signed by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Senator George Akume.

The move is part of enforcing the National Education Repository and Databank (NERD) policy, which aims to digitise and preserve academic works across Nigeria’s institutions. The goal is to tackle certificate fraud, improve academic quality, and make sure every graduate’s work adds to Nigeria’s body of knowledge.

The Minister of Education, Dr. Tunji Alausa, said the policy also allows students and their lecturers to earn from their academic work, which will be stored in a national digital platform.

NERD spokesperson, Haula Galadima, explained that each submission must include the names of the student, supervisor(s), Head of Department, and the institution. “This will improve the quality of supervision and discourage poor academic work,” she said.

From March 30 every year, schools and organisations must submit compliance reports. Existing NYSC members or graduates mobilised before October 6 are not affected.

September 29, 2025 0 comments
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Headlines

BREAKING: Jubilation as FG pays NYSC corps members N77,000 monthly allowance

by Folarin Kehinde March 26, 2025
written by Folarin Kehinde

The Federal Government has finally began the payment of N77,000 monthly allowance to National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) members.

Some corps members on social media confirmed the development.

A Twitter user, @ToluDaniel10, wrote
“NYSC is finally paying 77k to corps members. If you have this girl’s DM, go say a big thank you. I bet the government wouldn’t have listened to you if not for her.”

Another user, @fimlex2, wondered why the space was still quite compared to when the scheme failed, tweeting:

“NYSC don pay corpers 77k now, see as everywhere just quiet.”

Similarly, @jess_odii confirmed the update:

“NYSC has finally started the 77k payment today.”

For @dreyymo, the news called for celebration, sharing the development with excitement emoji:

“NYSC don pay 77k oooo I feel good .”

Details later…

March 26, 2025 0 comments
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Headlines

NYSC member confirmed Dead as Lassa fever Outbreak hit Ogun

by Folarin Kehinde March 26, 2025
written by Folarin Kehinde

A 25-year-old member of the National Youth Service Corp (NYSC), has reportedly died of Lassa fever at a secondary health facility in ljebu North Local Government Area of Ogun State.

LEADING REPORTERS learnt that the female corp member who fell sick while in Ondo State, was brought to the health facility last Tuesday and later died same day.

This was contained in a statement made available to DAILY POST and signed by the Commissioner for Health, Tomi Coker, on Wednesday.

Coker also confirmed the outbreak of Lassa fever in the state.

The statement reads, “Ogun State has confirmed a case of Lassa Fever and as such declared Lassa fever outbreak.

“The index case is a 25-year-old female National Youth Corp member who fell sick while in Ondo State and was brought to on of our secondary health facility in ljebu North LGA on 18th March 2025 and later died same day.

Lassa fever is a viral Haemorrhagic disease that presents with High grade fever, Headache, General body weakness, Sore throat, Muscle pain, Cough, Nausea, Vomiting, Diarrhoea, Chest pain and Unexplained bleeding from the ears, eyes, nose, mouth and other body openings.”

Coker urged members of the community to report to the hospital if any of the listed symptoms is noticed.

“We implore members of the community to promptly report to the hospital if they notice any of these symptoms. Any case of febrile illness that has not responded to 48 hours use of anti-malaria or antibiotics should raise an index of suspicion for Lassa fever!

March 26, 2025 0 comments
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Business

GAIM 6 Promo: Fidelity Bank rewards NYSC member with N500,000 Entrepreneurship Grant

by Folarin Kehinde March 4, 2025
written by Folarin Kehinde

In affirmation to keeping their word, Fidelity Bank has awarded the sum of N500,000 entrepreneurship grant to Koromo Bomane-aziba, a serving FCT Corp member in the 6th edition of its Getz Alerts In Million, (GAIM) promo.

Abuja Branch Leader Fidelity Bank, Vincent Ijioma while speaking in Abuja on Tuesday at the presentation of the grant stated that the entrepreneurship grant aims at giving back to the society, especially to serving corp members as a start up capital to ease their business startup and make their dreams reality.

Ijioma explained that the grant will be given to corp members who won the promo on quarterly basis adding that more than 12 corp members are currently on the waiting list.

“What we are doing is also part of
the way of rewarding and giving back to the society and part of the things that we have done differently in this year promo is to incorporate the NYSC into it.

“The bank decided they were going to make available 500,000 what we call
entrepreneurship grants that we are giving to people, the lucky winners from the
draw. What we are doing here today is also happening in every other place across the nation with people that have won, they are making that presentation.

“Like I said, from the list that was sent to
us, we have more than 12 corp members currently, you know, that this transition is going on. And it’s not going to be a one-off thing, it’s going to happen every quarter.”. he added.

Expressing her delight after receiving the cash reward, Koromo Bomane-aziba stated that her dreams of starting her culinary business is now a reality, she however advised her fellow corp members to open account with fidelity bank and enjoy many benefits and opportunities that the bank presents.

“I am happy that I was chosen for this. I was really surprised because I didn’t expect it. This just came about and I really want to thank fidelity Bank for giving me this opportunity. And I would want to go into a business, which is what I love doing. I love cooking. While in camp, I joined the culinary class because that’s what I love doing. So with this money, I’m really going to start a big business. Something I can use to manage myself while I’m in
Abuja.

“I will advise fellow corp member that if something like this happens to them, they shouldn’t take it for granted and they should try as much as they can to own an account with Fidelity Bank. Because just as I was, I was surprised and I didn’t expect this. So once they are able to get an
account with Fidelity Bank, I believe they have more packages for other corp members so they will definitely be opportune like me.”. She added.

March 4, 2025 0 comments
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Headlines

We will start paying N77,000 Monthly Allowance once budget is passed – NYSC DG

by Folarin Kehinde January 30, 2025
written by Folarin Kehinde

The Director General of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), Brigadier General Yushau Ahmed, has announced that corps members will begin receiving a monthly allowance of N77,000 starting from February 2025.

General Ahmed made this announcement on Thursday while addressing the 2024 Batch ‘C’ Stream 11 corps members in Katsina.

He explained that the new allowance has been included in the 2025 Federal Government’s budget and will be implemented once the budget is passed.

According to General Ahmed, “This month (January) has already ended, but once the budget is passed, by next month (February), you will start receiving N77,000 instead of the usual N33,000.”

He said that the new allowance was approved by the Federal Government and urged corps members to reciprocate the government’s gesture during their service year.

He said that the new allowance was approved by the Federal Government and urged corps members to reciprocate the government’s gesture during their service year.

The NYSC boss also reiterated his commitment to the welfare and security of corps members across the country. He assured them that they will not be deployed to areas with security threats.

It can be recalled that the scheme, last year, announced an increase in the monthly allowance paid to corp members following the minimum wage increase from N30,000 to N70,000.

January 30, 2025 0 comments
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Breaking: CBN sacks Deputy Governor’s aide Olakunle Abiola for certificate forgery LR
ExclusivesHeadlines

Breaking: CBN sacks Deputy Governor’s aide Olakunle Abiola for certificate forgery

by Leading Reporters January 24, 2025
written by Leading Reporters

The Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr Olayemi Cardoso has allegedly sacked Mr. Olakunle Abiola, aide to Deputy Governor of Central Bank Ms. Emem Usoro for falsification of National Youth Service Corp, NYSC certificate, LeadingReporters can authoritatively reveal.

A discreet CBN source who is in the know revealed that Mr. Olakunle Abiola, popularly known in CBN circles as Deputy Governor’s Henchman DGH was relieved of his duty upon discovering that his NYSC certificate was forged.

Although, it was learned that following the intervention of Abiola’s principal, Ms. Usoro, and to avoid being prosecuted, Abiola was said to have been given the option of resigning his appointment with CBN.

Mr. Abiola, prior to his shameful dismissal worked for United Bank of Africa, from where Ms. Usoro was said to have moved him to Central Bank of Nigeria.  An insider source said that Abiola had worked with the Central Bank of Nigeria before joining UBA and latter returned to CBN when his principal was appointed a deputy governor.  Others sources said that Abiola unceremoniously left CBN some years back when the bubble of certificate forgery first burst.

Years later, he returned to Central Bank of Nigeria with Ms. Usoro, who immediately promoted him from being her aide to an Assistant Director.

Olakunle Abiola was responsible for facilitating the employment of his old time friend Adesoji Ogungbesan.  Recall that LeadingReporters has previously published the backdoor arrangement that saw Adesoji Ogungbesan being employed as an Executive Director, Corporate Services in one of the Central Bank of Nigeria’s sister company, Nigeria Security, Printing and Minting Plc.  Mr. Adesoji was interviewed and recommended for the position of a senior manager only to end up as an Executive Director through a backdoor arrangement facilitated by Mr. Abiola and his principal, Deputy Governor Usoro.

January 24, 2025 0 comments
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Headlines

NYSC Rejects HND Graduates At Orientation Camps

by Folarin Kehinde August 29, 2024
written by Folarin Kehinde

Following the opening of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) orientation camp opened yesterday across the country, Polytechnic graduates with the Higher National Diploma (HND) without Industrial Training (IT) certification were sent back.

NYSC had introduced a new policy demanding IT certification for those seeking to fulfil their national service obligations and has halted the screening process for some HND graduates.

Leading Reporters had earlier reported how the NYSC had announced that HND graduates must provide evidence of completing their one-year mandatory IT certificate before being registered in their respective camps.

The policy mandates that graduates of polytechnics and monotechnics who had been mobilised for Batch B Stream II provide evidence of the mandatory one-year Industrial Training (IT) as a requirement for participating in the camp.

This medium gathered that the NYSC Orientation Camp in Kubwa, Abuja, on Tuesday at 11 a.m., observed that registration was going smoothly with corps members who had all the requirements.

However, a few corps members who were rejected due to the absence of an IT certificate lamented that they had already completed their degrees and were ready to serve the country, only to find themselves excluded due to certification.

They expressed hope for a resolution that allows them to fulfil their service obligations without being penalised for unforeseen gaps in documentation.

One of the corps members who spoke anonymously, because she did not want her name to appear in public, described the process as wrongly timed since their mates were already serving without passing through the hurdle.

“They are asking for the IT certificate; once you present it and other documents, they ask you to proceed with the registration. The requirement has led to frustration among some corps members. Most of the corps members without the IT certificate are frustrated, as you can see some of them there,” she said.

A nursing mother, Mrs. Hauwa Collins, who came to register early in the morning, told our correspondent that the process was transparent as long as you had all the necessary documents.

“I arrived at the camp before 10 a.m. When the screening started, I was asked to present my IT certificate, age declaration, and other documents. They did not waste time after verifying all the records. I have collected my kits now and I am about to finish the registration.

“But some of our colleagues are frustrated. I met one woman who came from Kaduna and is upset because she was screened out,” she added.

At the time of this report, corps members were still arriving at the camp, and the victims’ fate remains uncertain.

However, our reporter could not obtain further details due to tight security checks that prevented non-corps members from entering the camp.

August 29, 2024 0 comments
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Headlines

NYSC portal crash leaves prospective corps members stranded in Cross River

by Folarin Kehinde June 10, 2024
written by Folarin Kehinde

Thousands of prospective National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) members are currently stranded in Cross River State due to the sudden crash of the NYSC registration portal on Saturday night.

The portal, which opened on June 8, 2024, crashed less than 12 hours later, leaving registrants stranded.

Leading reporters learnt that thousands of Nigerian graduates, waiting to enrol in the NYSC scheme, were left stranded at Ikom, Calabar, Ogoja, and Ugep, at various computer centres across the state while trying to register for the exercise.

Two days later, on June 10th, 2024, the NYSC headquarters finally stated its apology, explaining that the portal crash was due to a conflict in the link between NIMC’s access to NYSC’s database, which led to the system disruption.

The statement reads in parts: “This is to inform all critical stakeholders of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC), accredited NYSC Cyber Café Operators (CB0), 2024 batch “B’ Prospective Corps Members (PCM) and the general public that we are aware of service disruption recently experienced on our registration portal.

“We have reviewed the situation and narrowed the cause of breakdown to conflict on the link in between NIMC access to our database containing sensitive user profile information and our technical crew has made additional changes to our technical infrastructure, which necessitated temporary disablement of access to batch “B” PCM registration to prevent further complications and technical irregularities.

“Note that no specific technical action is required of our esteemed CBOS. However, CBOS is implored to update and educate Prospective Corp Members on this development pending resolution. All 2024 batch “B’ Prospective Corps Members are hereby cautioned to desist from ascribing fault to CBOS for the delay.

“We strongly recommend that all CBOS repose the confidentiality of their access code to prevent unauthorized use by providing an additional layer of security for their account (Additional details are available in our help centre).

June 10, 2024 0 comments
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