Connect with us

Politics

NYSC certificate scandal: Why Adeosun is guilty as charged

Published

on

Spread The News

It has been nearly one month since the news broke that Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun illegitimately skipped the mandatory National Youth Service and went ahead to procure a fake certificate of exemption for employment opportunities in contravention of the laws of the land.

 

However, since the news broke, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun has neither refuted the allegation nor responded to it. What may have been lost on the minister is that her silence speaks even more than any verbal or written rebuttal she could have offered.

 

Her silence communicates either of two things: that she is guilty and simply just wants the news to fritter away, or she believes Nigerians from whose taxes she is paid do not deserve an explanation.

 

The NYSC Act mandates every Nigerian graduate below the age of 30 to commit one year to serve the country. The law demands that even Nigerian graduates from foreign tertiary institutions commit to the mandatory service as a requisite for employment in the country.

 

Available facts in the public domain acknowledge that Kemi Adeosun graduated from the Polytechnic of East London, now University of East London in 1989 at the age of 22 and started work almost immediately in the United Kingdom.

 

There are essentially two fundamental facts that place a burden of culpability on the minister. She presented an exemption certificate to secure jobs in Nigeria up to a ministerial appointment.

 

She graduated at age 22 and could not have merited an exemption certificate since she did not fall within that category. Therefore, and logically so, any exemption certificate in her custody was either awarded illegitimately by NYSC or was forged by Mrs. Kemi Adeosun. Whatever the case, this is a huge mess for her, the government and the entire country.

 

The NYSC law is clear and straightforward and should be so applied in this matter. It is clear that there is a conspiracy to bury the allegations and redirect the attention of Nigerians to other matters.

 

It therefore behooves the President to intervene for the sake of his personal integrity and that of the administration he leads.

 

Let no one fool the government that the continued stay of Mrs. Kemi Adeosun as the Minister of Finance without an express response to the allegation levelled against her is not a dent on the integrity stance of President Buhari.

 

The President must act now and restore integrity in his government. It is not in the country’s interest to have anyone with this scale of scandal occupy such an important office. Indeed, in a decent environment, the Minister would have resigned immediately the scandal broke.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Trending