Keyamo, who sued Lagos assembly for absolving Tinubu of forgery, becomes his spokesman

Keyamo, who sued Lagos assembly for absolving Tinubu of forgery, becomes his spokesman

The Minister of State for Labour and Employment, Festus Keyamo, in 1999, sued the Lagos State House of Assembly for clearing then Governor Bola Tinubu

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The Minister of State for Labour and Employment, Festus Keyamo, in 1999, sued the Lagos State House of Assembly for clearing then Governor Bola Tinubu, the presidential flagbearer of the ruling All Progressives Congress, of allegations of certificate forgery and perjury.

According to The Africa Report, Keyamo, who is now the spokesperson for the Tinubu Campaign Organisation, had in the case with suit number ID/639M/99, dragged all 41 members of the House before Justice C.O. Segun of the Lagos State High Court.

He had argued that the court should determine that only the Chief Judge could investigate Tinubu for certificate forgery.

The court ruled that because Tinubu enjoyed immunity at the time, only the Lagos State House of Assembly could investigate him.

The Assembly subsequently investigated him and within a week, he was cleared of all wrongdoing.

Dissatisfied with the resolution of the Lagos Assembly, Keyamo, who was a protégé of late Gani Fawehinmi, sued all the members of the state legislature for clearing Tinubu.

In the originating motion, Keyamo noted that Tinubu had in the forms he submitted to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), stated that he attended Government College, Ibadan, from 1965 to 1968 and then proceeded to Richard Daley College, Chicago, Illinois, USA, from 1969 to 1971 before completing his studies at the Chicago State University in 1979 but that the certificates were lost

Keyamo recalled that based on the allegations that the certificates were forged, the Lagos State House of Assembly set up a five-member panel that investigated Tinubu for only four days and could not have done a thorough job.

He added that the Assembly lacked the constitutional power to investigate perjury and its findings were thus null and void.

He therefore sought four reliefs including a declaration by the court that “the final report submitted by the said five-man panel on Monday, September 27, 1999 to the defendants which in its totality cleared the Governor of Lagos State, Senator Bola Ahmed Tinubu of allegations of forgery and perjury, is null and void and of no effect.”

However, the court struck out the matter because it was not supported by an affidavit.

Keyamo took the case to the Court of Appeal where he lost again and then to the Supreme Court where he was finally defeated.

In his response to The Africa Report, however, Keyamo said he only challenged the right of the Lagos Assembly to clear Tinubu and not the actual findings of the report.