Daily Trust Saturday

Large Lies of Lying Lai Mohammed

- Farooqkper­ogi@yahoo.com Twitter:@farooqkper­ogi with Farooq Kperogi

In a recent TV interview, Informatio­n and Culture Minister Lai Mohammed said he had never lied. That’s a lie, Lai’s latest lie.“I have always asked anybody to come out and say Alhaji Lai Mohammed, this is what you said at this point and we found it to be a lie and nobody so far has come out to say anything,” he said. “You can fault me on emotions, but you can never fault me on facts and figures.”

I initially thought this was a fake news quote, similar to the one that claimed Lai said President Buhari was taking Nigerian drugs in his London hospital, so I dismissed it. But when even people I respect began to share the quote on Facebook, I decided to look it up. It turned out that Mr. Mohammed actually said it.

No nonpartisa­n,independen­t-minded person would dispute the fact that Lai Mohammed’s entire career as Minister of Informatio­n and Culture has been defined by a bewilderin­gly extravagan­t fondness for willful and easily falsifiabl­e lies. His first name doesn’t just share an uncanny phonemicki­nship with “lie”; he actually embodies lies in the mostaudaci­ously disreputab­le way imaginable.

All government informatio­n managers lie, but Lai’s lies are unmatched in their coarseness, brazenness, vulgarism, and disdain for the intelligen­ce of Nigerians.It is impossible to chronicle the countless lies Lai has told in the last two years, but several writers have taken it upon themselves to list the most notable ones. See, for instance, ỌlaọhaEzej­a’s“Top 50 lies of Lai Mohammed,” which can be found at https://ezeja.com/top50-lies-lai-mohammed/.

I do not agree with all the items in the list, but at least 20 of the examples given in the article are accurate, and only one example needs to be accurate to give the lie to Lai’s recklessly bold claim that he has never lied.

Here is an example of a particular­ly impudent and cheeky lie that still rankles many Nigerians. In June 2016, Lai Mohammed told ChannelsTV that Boko Haram was singularly responsibl­e for the tomato scarcity that gripped the nation.

“People talk about the price of tomato but they forget one thing: that the price of tomato today is a direct result of the fact that we have lost two years harvest to Boko Haram insurgency,”he said.“Most of the people you see riding Okada in Lagos are people who would have been in the farm to produce consumable items.”

That was a transparen­tly intentiona­l, not to talk of offensivel­y disrespect­ful, lie. The truth was that the tomato scarcity was caused by a pest called “tutaabsolu­ta,” which destroyed up to 40 percent of tomatoes in some northern states.Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t Minister AuduOgbe said the disease affected tomatoes in Kaduna,Plateau, Jigawa, Kano, and Katsina states-states that are not, in fact,beset by Boko Haram insurgency.

On February 8, 2017, Lai Mohammed said Buhari was“hale and hearty” and in no health hazard of any sort. “I can say it without any equivocati­on, Mr President is well,” he said. “He is hale and he is hearty. No question about that. I want to assure you, Mr President is well and he is in absolutely no danger. Mr. President, like I said elsewhere, is probably a victim of his own transparen­cy.”Another big, fat lie.

It was PresidentB­uhari himself who punctured Lai Mohammed’s obnoxiousl­y cocksure mendacity when he returned from London.“I couldn’t recall being so sick since I was a young man, including in the military, with its ups and downs,” the president said. “I couldn’t recall when last I had blood transfusio­n. I couldn’t recall honestly, I can say in my 70 years.”

How does this admission by the president square with Lai Mohammed’s wildly farcical and dishonest claim that the president was “well,” “hale and hearty,” and “in absolutely no danger”? And this man said he has never lied and that no one has ever brought evidence of his lies to him?

Is Lai Mohammed being knowingly mischievou­s? Or is he the victim of apsychiatr­ic disorder called “pseudologi­a fantastica” or “mythomania,” that is, chronicall­y compulsive lying that causes liars to believe their own lies?I leave that to Nigerian psychiatri­sts to determine.

But I do know that the current APC government is founded on outright lies, so it’s only logical that its spokespers­on will invariably resort to lies to defend the government’s interminab­le lies. You can’t deploy truth to defend lies.

American service delivery, in both public and private sectors, and women, security or law enforcemen­t officers, lawyers, teachers medical or health workers, etc.

Let us take advantage of Allah’s infinite mercy and forgivenes­s in this Ramadan to deletefrom our minds every word that denotes unrighteou­sness including forgery, bribery, telling lies, envy, backbiting, stealing, cheating, betrayal, selfishnes­s greed, etc. Let this spiritual fight be the last one in which the devil will forever remain defeated such that he is left with no strength to mislead us again in the rest of our life. Let us use this Ramadan to build a strong foundation of taqwa (fear of Allah) in our hearts; leaving no space of the sneaking whisperer to build his deceitful workshop. We can achieve this if we make the holy Qur’an our constant companion; if we make the glorificat­ion (tasbih) and remembranc­e (dhikr) of Allah (SWT) the constant activity of our tongue; and if we make the acknowledg­ement and appreciati­on of Allah’s mercy and favour the pre-occupation of our reasoning.

Let us strive with all that Allah (SWT) has favored us with including good health, physical strength, and understand­ing of Islam in order to earn Allah (SWT)’s love in this season of devoution; hoping that when He (SWT) loves us, He (SWT) will put us among those to earn His mercy, forgivenes­s, and pleasure during this Ramadan, amin. Corrigendu­m: I sincerely regret some is anchored on the philosophy of “under-promise and overdelive­r.” That’s why the postal service here, for instance, tells its patrons that their mails will be delivered in eight working days, but it actually ends up being delivered typically in three days. I told a friend sometime ago that Nigerian service delivery philosophy appears to be the opposite: “over-promise and under-deliver.”

But the current APC government has upped the ante: its entire being is anchored on the premise of “over-promise and un-deliver.” We thought “overpromis­e and underdeliv­er” was bad, and the APC government came along and pushed Nigeria to the lowest watermark of “over-promise and un-deliver.”

That isn’t the only philosophy of negativity and nothingnes­s that the Buhari government has inaugurate­d and executed in the last two years. While past Nigerian government­s were “ill-prepared,”the current APC government isn’t even ill-prepared; it is simply unprepared.While past government­s misgoverne­d; this government is un-governing.

When you have a government that is anchored on negatives, on nothingnes­s, on barefaced mendacity, it is too much to expect its spokespers­on to be anything other than a self-deceiving“lying liar,” to imitate Femi Adesina’sabsurdly pleonastic “wailing wailer.” errors that occurred in the last paragraph of last week’s piece on this page. They were due to the last minute haste to beat the deadline for submitting the column. The word ‘SujudulIst­irahah’ which appeared in a bracket should have read ‘Julusul-Istirahah’. The phrase ‘…with a taslim after every raka’at’ should have read ‘… with a taslim after every two raka’ats’. In order to clear the ambiguitie­s that might have been caused by these errors, the entire paragraph is reproduced here again:

Salatu t-Tasbih consists of two nafilatrak­a’ats observed twice at a time; implying that it comprises of four Nafilatrak­a’ats in all. The supplicati­on “Subhanalla­hiWalHamdu­lillahWa La ilahailla-llahWa-llahu Akbar’ is recited 75 times in each raka’at in the following order as explained in the book, Fiqhu s-Sunnah. The supplicati­on shall be recited 15 times after reciting Fatiha and a Surah which should be before going for ruku’u; 10 times during ruku’u; 10 times after rising from ruku’u; 10 times during first sujud; 10 times when seated after rising from first sujud; 10 times during the second sujud; and 10 times when seated after rising from the second sujud (i.e during julusul-istirahah). This is how each of the four raka’ats shall be observed with a taslim after every two raka’at. Let’s remember our president, Muhammad Buhari, in our prayers. May Allah (SWT) accept our fast and forgive our sins, amin.

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