Sunday, June 26, 2016

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Ayo Fayose’s Smear Against Aisha Buhari and Imperative of Investigative Journalism

In a statement signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Idowu Adelusi, Mr. Fayose( Governor of the State of Ekiti) said President Buhari was far from being a clean man.
"Even the President cannot claim to be an angel," the governor said, in reaction to the freezing of his Zenith Bank account by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission.
"The estate he built in Abuja is known to us. His wife was indicted over the Halliburton Scandal (sic). When that American, Jefferson, was being sentenced, the President's wife was mentioned as having wired $170,000 to Jefferson. Her name was on page 25 of the sentencing of Jefferson. We can serialize the judgment for people to see and read."
The governor's Special Assistant on New Media, Lere Olayinka, later circulated links to and copies of the court document detailing Mrs Buhari's mention in the scandal.

Well, I am not a fan of Fayose but we should at least be fair to him or do justice to his messages(even when mixed). Fayose made two allegations against President Buhari:

1. "The estate he built in Abuja is known to us"  It is remarkable no one in the presidency has challenged Fayose to disclose the location of this estate. Plus, not a single line was devoted to this allegation in President Buhari's response to Fayose. More so, this is not the first time this allegation has been made or rumor circulated. Why is no one talking about this estate? It shouldn't be difficult to easily confirm or disprove what is built in Abuja. Even pertinent is Buhari's refusal to make his asset declaration public. We may not know the truth until Buhari is courageous enough to publish his asset declaration form for all to see. When President Yar'Adua declared his assets, his net worth could easily be calculated. Ditto for Kayode Fayemi whose late deputy, Mrs Olayinka, was richer than him. In Buhari's case, why is it that no one knows his net worth in monetary terms? So, while we castigate Fayose for his nuisance value, we should also closely look at his allegations and ask Buhari questions. 

2."His wife was indicted over the Halliburton Scandal" This has attracted a lot of attention (perhaps because of its international dimension). However, is it not unbelievable that Nigeria as a nation could not establish the identity of a citizen who wired $170,000(!) from a Nigerian account overseas? It is a shame that this case has been reduced to "my Aisha is not your Aisha" but no one knows the actual Aisha.Yet in this country and in John Kerry's voice "James Ibori was not James Onanefe Ibori until it was James Onanefe Ibori". Evan Enwerem was not Evans Enwerem until they both assumed the same identity. Let us first nab the real Aisha Buhari, the impostor or whatever she is, before giving President Buhari's wife a pass. It's not enough for him to say his wife is not the Aisha, he should also be interested in knowing the elusive Aisha.

Thanks,
Bayo.

On Sat, Jun 25, 2016 at 12:13 AM, Farooq A. Kperogi <farooqkperogi@gmail.com> wrote:

By Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.

Twitter: @farooqkperogi


Ekiti State Governor Ayo Fayose's willfully false charge that Wife of the President Aisha Buhari is the "Aisha Buhari" implicated in the infamous cash-for-contract Halliburton scandal between 1994 and 2004 has animated a frenetic, impassioned conversation on Nigerian cyberspace. My intervention in a Facebook status update after reading Premium Times' tendentious reporting on the allegation both (re)structured and intensified this conversation.


For the benefit of readers who are not on Facebook—or who are neither my friends nor my followers on Facebook—here is what I wrote:


"Premium Times' reporting on Gov. Ayo Fayose's allegation against Wife of the President Aisha Buhari is reckless, factually inaccurate, and libelous all rolled into one. This is particularly disquieting because thousands, perhaps millions, of Nigerians on social media are ignorantly spreading a malicious falsehood against an innocent woman.


"Read the original New York Times story published on April 29, 2007 to know that the 'Aisha Buhari' mentioned in the corruption scandal ISN'T the president's wife. In the New York Times story, 'Aisha Buhari' identified herself as the 'daughter' of 'General Muhammadu Buhari,' not his wife. Of course, President Muhammadu Buhari has no daughter by that name. The said 'Aisha Buhari' is obviously a criminal impostor who has not the remotest relationship with President Buhari either by marriage or by blood. 


"Take a look at her picture, which I downloaded from the New York Times website, and tell me if she bears even the slightest resemblance to Mrs. Aisha Buhari or any of the president's daughters. This lady is a major-league scammer who has refused to reveal her real identity, and Premium Times failed to do basic fact-checking to confirm this. It took me less 2 minutes to find this out.


"In case you're not able to read the full story from the New York Times, here are excerpts that conclusively show that the 'Aisha Buhari' mentioned in the story is neither the president's wife nor any of his daughters. If the real Mrs. Aisha Buhari decides to sue Premium Times (and Ayo Fayose), predicting her success against them in the court is a slam dunk, as Americans say:


'As for Ms. Buhari, who is living in Virginia, it's not clear who she really is. For one, she is under investigation in Nigeria by its Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, said its head, Nuhu Ribadu.


'Mr. Ribadu said he is uncertain if her name is Aisha Buhari, but he added that she is not a daughter of General Buhari. The former Nigerian ruler agrees.


'"I don't have any relationship with that Aisha Buhari," Mr. Buhari said. "I don't have any daughter called Aisha Buhari living outside this country. She is not my daughter."


'Mr. Ribadu's agency has asked American authorities to arrest Ms. Buhari. That has not happened, but the Justice Department has an interest in her. Last summer, she testified before a grand jury investigating Mr. Jefferson, the congressman, who is suspected of soliciting bribes from American companies seeking business in Nigeria.'


"I won't hesitate to criticize Buhari (and his wife) if and when they err, but I won't tolerate irresponsible and malevolent smears on people's reputation."


After my status update went viral on multiple social media platforms, the biographical information page of a passport belonging to an "Aisha Mohammadu Buhari" surfaced. People who shared the passport on social media said it belonged to the fake "Aisha Buhari" mentioned in the Halliburton bribery scandal whose New York Times photo I shared on my Facebook page.


I looked hard at the photo in the passport to see if it bears any resemblance to the photo in the New York Times story. Although I saw some resemblance, I frankly couldn't say this with cocksure certainty precisely because the New York Times photo appeared to be a stealth photo that didn't quite capture the woman's full frontal visage.


I wasn't surprised when the "Aisha Mohammadu Buhari" shown in the passport came out to forcefully disclaim any association with the "Aisha Buhari" associated with the Halliburton scam. "They are desperate to cover their dirty track and link my name with the scandal that they have to first of all steal my passport," she said. "My passport was stolen early this year. And to give credibility to their story, details from the passport were used."


This case is practically crying to be thoroughly investigated and unearthed by a smart, careful, transaction-oriented journalistic sleuthhound. 


First, the lady hasn't said the passport is fake; she says it is indeed hers, but that it was stolen "early this year" "to give credibility to [the] story" that Mrs. Aisha Buhari has no connection with the Halliburton scam. Now, that's an astonishingly illogical chronological inversion. Did the people who "stole" her passport early this year have a crystal ball that foretold that Ayo Fayose would accuse President Buhari's wife of complicity in the Halliburton scandal in June 2016 and therefore stole her passport in readiness for this?


Second, the biographical information contained in the passport indicates that the said "Aisha Mohammadu Buhari" was born in Daura. Yes, Daura in Katsina State—President Buhari's hometown. Is that a coincidence? Does anyone in Daura know the woman shown in the photo? She said she was born on August 4, 1975. Who are her parents in Daura? This is easily verifiable information because Daura is a small town.


Third, does anyone in Daura know any "Aisha Mohammadu Buhari" who lives in the Washington DC area, that is, Washington DC itself, Virginia, or Maryland? This should also be easy to verify because I don't imagine that there are many Daura indigenes who live in the United States given that the United States has historically not been a destination of choice for northern Nigerians.


"Aisha Mohammadu Buhari's" place of residence in the United States is particularly curious because the New York Times story of 2007 described the "Aisha Buhari" implicated in the Halliburton scandal as "living in Virginia," which is contiguous with Washington, DC. She renewed her Nigerian passport in 2012 in Washington DC, indicating that she most likely lives around the area. (Virginia and Maryland are to Washington DC what Niger State and Nassarawa State are to Abuja.)


Fourth, what are the odds that a lady who claims to be born in Daura to a "Mohammadu Buhari" isn't impersonating the most famous Buhari from that town? (By the way, President Buhari insists on his name being spelled as "Muhammadu"—and not any other variant. If "Aisha Mohammadu Buhari" was attempting to appropriate the president's name, she obviously didn't get the memo that Buhari resents his name being spelled in any variant other than "Muhammadu").


Finally, since we have information that an "Aisha Buhari" testified before a US grand jury in 2006, it is entirely possible to ascertain her (photographic) identity from that testimony. Plus, New York Times' Michael Temchine who took the stealth photo of "Aisha Buhari" in 2007 in Virginia with the caption "Aisha Buhari has claimed that she is the daughter of the former military ruler of Nigeria, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari" should be able to give us insights into the real identity of the scammer pretending to be "Aisha Buhari" that he photographed.


Premium Times and Sahara Reporters should be able to investigative the US angle of this conundrum. They have the resources and contacts to do it.



Related Article:

Farooq A. Kperogi, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Journalism & Emerging Media
School of Communication & Media
Social Science Building 
Room 5092 MD 2207
402 Bartow Avenue
Kennesaw State University
Kennesaw, Georgia, USA 30144
Cell: (+1) 404-573-9697
Personal website: www.farooqkperogi.com
Twitter: @farooqkperog
Author of Glocal English: The Changing Face and Forms of Nigerian English in a Global World

"The nice thing about pessimism is that you are constantly being either proven right or pleasantly surprised." G. F. Will

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