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Why Nigerians Want Buhari's Certificate !!
Will you still have your high school diploma at age 72?
That’s been the question raging in Nigeria for the last few weeks as
supporters of incumbent president Goodluck Jonathan demand his opponent
produce proof he indeed did graduate. Retired general Muhammadu Buhari
took to Twitter—20 times—to defend himself.
The whole affair underscores this much: Nigerians place a premium on
educational qualifications in all areas of life from employment
prospects to marriage partner choices … and, yes, to presidents. In
global cities, like London, Washington, and Atlanta, it’s not unheard
of to bump into a degree-laden cab driver from Nigeria— working on his
PhD thesis at night. Of course, that pedigree comes up within minutes of
conversation.
Tiger Mom writer Amy Chua included Nigerians in her controversial book, The Triple Package,
as one of eight ethnic groups with a “superiority complex,” while also
being fairly insecure and feeling the need to prove themselves.
“Nigerians earn doctorates at stunningly high rates … [these] groups
have a cultural edge, which enables them to take advantage of
opportunity far more than others.” Or as the New York Times noted in an article about Chua’s book:
Nigerians make up less than 1 percent of the black
population in the United States, yet in 2013 nearly one-quarter of the
black students at Harvard Business School were of Nigerian ancestry;
over a fourth of Nigerian-Americans have a graduate or professional
degree, as compared with only about 11 percent of whites.
In the US, Nigeria has the largest number of students from any
African nation—just under 8,000 last year. They spent $241 million on
getting undergraduate and post-graduate degrees in 2013 to 2014,
according to Institute of International Education. The official figures
have near tripled since 1996 to ’97 as more Nigerians seek quality
higher education at a relatively exorbitant cost to studying at home;
meanwhile, the number of universities in Nigeria has rocketed from just
over 30 in the early 1990s to around 130 today. A degree is the best way
to get a good middle-class job in a very competitive market.
For
Nigerians it’s not only about high academic achievement and bragging
rights. It’s also about being prepared to navigate a very bureaucratic
society exacerbated in recent decades by rampant identity fraud. Most
government bodies and businesses demand reams of paper evidence for
everyday citizen roles.
As for Buhari, his degree came more than a half-century ago. He just
doesn’t know where he put it. (Nigerian law requires that presidential
candidates have passed their school certificate exams, which in the
’60s was administered by Cambridge University.) Buhari has other
qualifications, though. He ran the country for nearly two years between
1984 and 1985. And he was a senior army officer for many years and has a
post-graduate qualification in strategic studies from the U.S. War
College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.
Jonathan’s tactic has worked very well as a distraction from real
issues. Buhari’s tweetstorm suggests the country best focus on those:
15/ And although the ruling party
may want to wish this away, the issue in this campaign cannot be my
certificate which I obtained 53…
— GMB Campaign Office (@GMBOffice) January 21, 2015
16/ …years ago. The issues are the
scandalous level of unemployment of millions of our young people, the
state of insecurity, the…
— GMB Campaign Office (@GMBOffice) January 21, 2015
He eventually did find it, but not before his rivals claimed it was fake. Even Buhari’s young daughter Zahra came to her father’s defense on Twitter.
If school certificate defines a
good president, don’t you think GEJ’s PhD certificate ought to have
fought insecurity & corruption.
— Miss Zahra (APC) (@Zahra_Buhari) January 28, 2015
Jonathan, a former college professor, has a PhD in zoology—an
important part of his rags-to-the- presidential-palace riches tale when
he ran four years ago. Some of Buhari’s supporters recently asked to see evidence of his doctorate thesis in an easily predictable tit-for-tat move.
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