THISDAY

OSINBAJO: SMOKE WITHOUT FIRE

Mustapha Bello writes that the vice-president is a hardworkin­g and efficient politician versed in getting things done

- Bello, a law practition­er, wrote from Abuja

Did you hear the story of the cleric who attended a meeting in a small room filled with smokers puffing on their cigarettes? Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo relived that experience during a church service in Lagos on February 10, 2019. The pastor and Law Professor said the incident occurred between 1999 and 2007, when he was Lagos State Attorney-General.

As the meeting with the men progressed that evening, he was discomfite­d by the smoke. Osinbajo said: “I was so upset by the fact that there was so much smoke and when I was leaving the place; my entire body smelled of cigarettes – my hair, my clothes – my entire body.

“As I was leaving, the first thought I had was why should I be in the company of these people who are smoking cigarettes and pipes? Why? Is it not wrong? Should I be in their company? After all I am a Christian, a born-again Christian. A pastor!”

Just like whiff after whiff of tobacco smoke assailed his nostrils that day, so has Osinbajo had to bear smear after smear of a network of seemingly coordinate­d fake news campaigns in recent years.

Perhaps after the Commander-in-Chief, the former university don has been the softest target of fake news merchants in the last five years of the President Muhammadu Buhari administra­tion. The funny thing is most of the attacks don’t even make any sense. They are often so easily disproved by basic fact-checking, that the sinister intent of the tale-bearers is obvious at a glance.

Sadly, the barrage of fake news has been perpetrate­d, at least in recent times, by profession­als: a lawyer – Femi Fani-Kayode; a journalist – Jackson Ude; and, not surprising­ly, a former political attack dog – Timi Frank. The malicious publicatio­ns have even been extended to the VP’s family.

Take the recent falsehood that Osinbajo’s daughter Kiki, who runs a fashion retail outfit in Abuja, owns an N800m property. The absurdity was propagated by Ude, a blogger and a former aide to ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, in a July 10 tweet from the comfort of his New York abode. The VP’s daughter debunked Ude’s claim in an Instagram post.

Kiki said: “For me it is completely unbelievab­le that a grown man will sit in his home and lie about me; a grown man who possibly has children my age! Like many young women in Nigeria, I work hard.

“It may be difficult for people like him to understand that a young woman can work hard and succeed on her own steam. Anyone can verify the ownership of the property of Glamd Africa at AGIS in Abuja. I am a tenant in the property. My landlord’s name is Musa Adams.”

Her landlord confirmed her statement, adding that the said property was never, at any point in time, sold to the vice- president’s daughter or to anyone. He challenged anyone in doubt to check with the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) authoritie­s.

That was not the first of Ude’s claims that suffered a rebuttal. Ude tied the N800m fake news to a previous even more stupendous claim that Osinbajo collected N4billion from the suspended acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Ibrahim Magu, who is being probed by a Presidenti­al panel.

The VP debunked the allegation and even asked the Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Adamu, to probe Ude’s claim and prosecute him for criminal defamation, if the claim is found to be untrue. Similarly, Magu also debunked the claim.

“I did not tell the panel that I gave the Vice President N4 billion. Where will I get such money? Do I have access to such funds? It is part of mudslingin­g. Please clear this. I do not have any control of such cash, I did not order the transfer of N4 billion to the VP or to anybody,” a member of the investigat­ing committee reportedly quoted Magu as saying.

Rather than provide proof, Ude clutched at straws and his response belied his true intention: getting the Vice President out of office. He said: “If he (Osinbajo) indeed wants to go to court, he needs to resign first, and sue me.”

Not done with his campaign, Ude again made a series of tweets on August 8, 2020 claiming in 2016, the VP connived with the Auditor-General, Anthony Mkpe Ayine and illegally took N10billion belonging to the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) from the Treasury Single Account (TSA) account.

Barely an hour later and, in a clearly coordinate­d plan, spokespers­on of the Coalition for United Political Parties (CUPP), Ikenga Imo Ugochinyer­e, issued a statement lapping on the spurious claims calling on Vice President to step aside and “clear his name.”

Showing their connivance, Ude’s online portal was the first to publish the CUPP comments. Sensing that the allegation­s were false and perhaps because of Ude’s track record of falsehood against the Vice President, no serious media organisati­on published that story. Again Ude claimed that the EFCC’s Secretary worked with the Simons Cooper law firm where VP was a partner before he resigned to take the oath of office, insinuatin­g that the VP planted him in EFCC to cut deals.

But the law firm asserted that the said secretary neither ever worked in nor even visited Simons Cooper! Weeks ago, Rudolf Okonkwo, aka Dr. Damages, ran a similar video clip attacking the Vice President based on a news report that had already been falsified. Okonkwo repeated a fake story and joined in the smear campaign against a truly honest public official.

Also featuring prominentl­y in the campaign against the vice president is a former deputy publicity secretary of the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) Timi Frank. Last September 23, Frank accused Osinbajo of mismanagin­g N90 billion allegedly provided by the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) as campaign funds for 2019 elections.

He did not provide any evidence to support his claim, but challenged Prof Osinbajo to sue him regarding the allegation, a challenge which the vice president took up immediatel­y. He also asked Osinbajo to resign for a thorough investigat­ion and unbiased prosecutio­n in court.

The vice president declared his readiness to waive his constituti­onal immunity to clear his name and instructed the commenceme­nt of legal action against Frank, and another Katch Ononuju, who put their names to the allegation. The FIRS has also since debunked Frank’s allegation, saying the agency’s annual allocation was not even up to N90 billion.

Interestin­gly, Osinbajo never tries to hug the limelight, but the few times he has, by providence, been cast into the public glare, he has been praised for being decisive. The actions he took while standing in for Buhari during the president’s holidays in the United Kingdom are reference points.

For instance, on May 18, 2016, Osinbajo, as Acting President signed an executive order on transparen­cy and improving the business environmen­t. It contained far-reaching initiative­s to be implemente­d by MDAs to ensure easier access to informatio­n, processes and documentat­ion, as well as promote efficiency in public service delivery.

 ??  ?? THE FUNNY THING IS MOST OF THE ATTACKS DON’T EVEN MAKE ANY SENSE. THEY ARE OFTEN SO EASILY DISPROVED BY BASIC FACT-CHECKING, THAT THE SINISTER INTENT OF THE TALE-BEARERS IS OBVIOUS AT A GLANCE.
THE FUNNY THING IS MOST OF THE ATTACKS DON’T EVEN MAKE ANY SENSE. THEY ARE OFTEN SO EASILY DISPROVED BY BASIC FACT-CHECKING, THAT THE SINISTER INTENT OF THE TALE-BEARERS IS OBVIOUS AT A GLANCE.

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