Former Head of State, Gen.Muhammadu Buhari
The Nigerian Army has said it is not in
custody of the original certificates of the All Progressives Congress
presidential candidate Maj. Gen. Muhammadu Buhari.
The Army, at a news conference by its
Director of Public Relations, Brig. Gen. Olajide Laleye, in Abuja on
Tuesday, added that it was also not in possession of the photocopies
or statement of results of Buhari.
It however explained that the entry
made for documentation by the APC candidate on its(Army) Form 199A,
indicated that he wrote and passed the West African School Certificate
in 1961.
The Director of Media and Publicity of
the APC Presidential Campaign Organisation, Garba Shehu, said in a terse
statement on Tuesday night that Buhari would address a new conference
on the issue on Wednesday(today).
Buhari had in an affidavit he deposed
to at the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja on
November 24, 2014 and submitted to the Independent National Electoral
Commission on December 18, 2014, said that his certificates were with
the military.
“I am the above-named person and deponent
to this affidavit therein. All my academic qualifications, documents as
filled in my presidential form, President APC/001/2015, are currently
with the Secretary, Military Board as of the time of presenting this
affidavit. The affidavit is made in good faith and for record purposes,”
he had written.
When the controversy over Buhari’s qualification gathered momentum, Laleye told The PUNCH
during an exclusive interview which was published on January 4, 2015,
that the military authorities were ready to release credentials and
certificates in its custody to serving and retired officers in need of
them.
He said that the procedure for the
retrieval or collection of the certificates was known to all serving or
retired officers of the military.
On Tuesday, Laleye said that military records showed that Buhari applied to join the Army on October 18, 1961. .
The Army spokesman explained that it was
the tradition of the Army to ensure that a selection board was set up to
verify the original credentials of candidates shortlisted for
commissioning.
Laleye said that records did not show that the process was followed .
However, he said that the entry made for
documentation by Buhari on Form 199A indicated that he had credit in
English Language, Geography, History, Health Science, Hausa and a Pass
in English Literature.
He said, “The media hype on Maj. Gen.
Buhari’s credentials as well as the numerous requests made by
individuals and corporate bodies to the Army on this issue have
necessitated that we provide the facts as contained in the retired
senior officer’s service record.
“Records available indicate that Maj.
Gen. Buhari applied to join the military as a form six student of the
Provincial Secondary School, Katsina on 18 October 1961.
“His application was duly endorsed by the
principal of the school, who also wrote a report on him and recommended
him suitable for military commission.
“It is a practice in the Army that before
candidates are shortlisted for commissioning into the officers’ cadre
of the service; the selection board verifies the original copies of
credentials that are presented. However, there is no available record to
show that this process was followed in the 1960s.
“Nevertheless, the entry made on Form
199A at the point of documentation after commission as an officer
indicated that the former Head of State obtained the WASC in 1961 with
credits in relevant subjects.
“Neither the original certified true
copy nor the statement of result of Maj. Gen. Buhari’s WASC result is in
his personal file.
“I hope this explanation will put to
rest, the raging controversy surrounding the secondary school
credentials of Maj. Gen. Buhari as it affects the Nigerian Army.”
Although the Army authorities did not
allow journalists to have copies of the documents filed by the former
Head of State for his commissioning as an officer, they created an
opportunity for the documents to be sighted
The Principal of the school, in
recommending Buhari for commissioning as an officer, said “I recommend
him for military commissioning; I consider that Mohammadu Buhari will
pass the West Africa School Certificate in English, Maths and three
other subjects.
Laleye said that the Army holds Buhari,
who rose to the enviable rank of Maj. Gen, and was Head of State of the
country, in high esteem and would not be party to the controversy over
“his eligibility for any political office.”
However, the APC in a statement by its
National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, urged the Peoples
Democratic Party not to compromise the army in the name of giving
President Goodluck Jonathan an unfair advantage ahead of the February 14
presidential poll.
The APC said compromising the army
could backfire. It said the military, as a symbol of national unity,
must beware of those seeking to use it to achieve selfish and
divisive ends.
The party said it found it funny that the army spokesman had told The PUNCH
in a publication on January 4, 2015 that it had the certificates of all
serving and retired officers only to deny having Buhari’s credentials
two weeks later.
It said, ‘‘In an interview with The Punch
on January 4, 2015, Brig.-Gen. Olaleye said, ‘Every serving and retired
Army officer has at least a copy of his certificates and credentials
kept in the Nigerian Army while that same serving and retired officer
has copies of those same certificates and credentials’
‘‘Is Brig.-Gen. Olaleye now saying that
he did not make that statement? If he did, what has happened between
then and now to make him to recant? It will be interesting to know what
has transpired between then and now.”
The APC added, ‘’Is he (Olaleye) now
saying that all those who were commissioned into the officer cadres in
the 1960s did not have their certificates verified? Does this not
confirm what we said that in trying to destroy Maj. Gen. Buhari, the PDP
and the Jonathan administration will end up destroying the army as an
institution? Or is it only Maj. Gen. Buhari that was commissioned into
the army in the 1960s.”
The APC argued that even if the army did
not have Buhari’s certificates, he (Buhari) “is still very qualified to
run for the country’s highest office, as stipulated by the 1999
Constitution.”
The party said since Olaleye had now
confirmed that the form Buhari filed contained his Secondary School
Certificate results, there was no scintilla of doubt about his
qualification to run for President as stipulated by the constitution.
It added, ‘‘We know that the PDP and the
Jonathan administration have constituted themselves into a court of law
and will like nothing more than the disqualification of our candidate so
they that will face no challenge in next month’s election.’’
Also, the Director, Media and
Information Management Directorate of Buhari Support Organisation,
Chidia Maduekwe, said the issue of Buhari’s certificate was
inconsequential.
He said, “INEC has said it and I am
saying it again, if anybody has doubts about the general’s credentials,
the person should go to court.
“What the constitution says is that a
person seeking for the office of President should be educated up to the
level of school certificate and there is evidence that the general was
in school up till form six, his school principal attested to this, he
joined the army and rose to the peak.”
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