Featured
Charly Boy reacts to Tinubu’s certificate scandal
There have been discrepancies concerning the educational qualifications of Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the presidential candidate of the ruling All Progressives Congress, as disclosed to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).
According to reports, the 2022 personal documents Tinubu submitted to INEC were not rhyming with his 1999 and 2003 educational qualifications.
In 1999 and 2003, the man regarded as the APC National Leader claimed, when he ran for office as a governorship candidate in Lagos, that he had attended primary and secondary schools.
In light of this, popular music writer and entertainer, Charles Oputa, also known as CharlyBoy, reacted on his Twitter handle, saying that it could be that the national leader of the APC attended primary and secondary school.
He explained that the reason for submitting incorrect information to the electoral umpire was solely because Tinubu was scared to reveal his true identity.
CharlyBoy Tweeted, “Make no mistake, Tinubu attended primary and secondary schools.” The reason he would rather lie that he never attended any than submit his certificates to INEC Nigeria is because those documents contain personal information about who he REALLY IS, his real name, and his age. ”
-
Latest1 week agoAPC’s Asogwa wins Enugu North senatorial by-election by wide margin
-
Latest1 week agoAPC, PDP clinch key by-elections as INEC declares winners in Kano, Rivers
-
Politics1 week agoPRP presidential primary heads to court as aspirant challenges Donald Duke’s nomination
-
Politics1 week agoWike-backed Lagos PDP extends olive branch to Bode George ahead of 2027 realignment
-
Latest5 days agoAlleged xenophobic attack claims life of Malawian street vendor in South Africa
-
Latest1 week agoOyebanji secures landslide re-election as INEC declares APC winner of Ekiti governorship poll
-
Football1 week agoJapan crush Tunisia 4-0 in historic 1,000th World Cup match as Curacao earns first-ever point
-
Football2 days agoAfrica breaks World Cup record with seven teams in knockout stage

