Jonathan N100bn allegation: Osinbajo lying to divert Nigerians attention from Maina – Reno Omokri

218

Former New Media aide to ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, Reno Omokri, has stated that Vice President Yemi Osinbajo lied about his former principal giving out N100 billion and $295 million two weeks before the 2015 elections.

The vice president had made the allegation while speaking on Friday at the Greater Nigeria Pastors Conference.

 In a post on his Facebook page yesterday, Omokri said Osinbajo has taken to his characteristic habit of lying.

He gave instances where Osinbajo lied in the post titled: Vice President Osinbajo, With Your Lies, Are You Sure You Are Still a Pastor?

 My attention has been drawn to claims in the media by the Vice President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, against former President Jonathan.

Speaking on Friday the 27th of October 2017 in Lagos at a ‘Greater Nigeria Pastors Conference’, the Vice President said “Weeks before the 2015 elections, the government then, gave out N100billion in cash and $295million in cash ostensibly for security within two weeks”.

I make bold to say that the Vice President has once again taken to his characteristic habit of lying.

Nigerians may recall that only last week, Vice President Osinbajo was in Anambra state where he lied that the present administration had paid $2 billion for the second Niger Bridge.

Read Also:  JUST IN: Troops intercept Boko Haram suicide bomb squad, neutralise 5

I had cause to expose that lie and forced the Presidency to issue a ‘clarification’. The money released was 2 billion Naira and it came from the Sovereign Wealth Fund set up by the Jonathan administration which the APC resisted and challenged in court.

It will also be recalled that in February 2016, the Vice President again lied when he claimed that both the Jonathan and Yar’adua government did not build a single road. This fact was easily disproved when even members of this administration, including Osinbajo’s boss, President Buhari, began commissioning projects, including roads built by the Jonathan administration.

Nigerians will recall that the Jonathan administration rebuilt the Benin-Ore portions of the Benin-Lagos road, the Vom-Manchok road, the Kano-Zaria Road bridge (named after late Emir Ado Bayero) and many more.

On this recent allegation by the Vice President, not only has the Vice President again lied, he is doing so to divert attention from the Maina scandal in which the administration in which he serves, by the testimony of the Maina Family, invited Abdulrasheed Maina, the infamous alleged pension thief, back into the country, reinstated him, promoted him and deployed him as Director of Human Resources in the ministry of Internal affairs.

Read Also:  I’m not completely fulfilled at 81, Balarabe Musa declares

When they were found out, the Presidency resorted to its favorite past time of blame game by preposterously accusing former President Jonathan of somehow magically being the brain behind Maina’s return. This is even as the Attorney General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami, had already revealed that he “acted in the public’s interest” in initiating the process for Maina’s return.

There is also the $25 billion Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation scam which is the biggest scam ever in the history of Nigeria since 1914 to date.

Finally, Nigerians want to know the truth about the Babachir Lawal probe which has been concluded and handed over to the President many months ago but of which no action has been taken.

Nigerians want to hear the truth about these scandals and not tired lies about looted funds that keep being recycled without proof.

I would like to remind the Vice President that he is a pastor and therefore conversant with the biblical admonition in Revelations 21:8 that “all liars, shall have their part in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone.”

Read Also:  Shun cultism, kidnapping, other negative vices, Jonathan advises students

It is not too late for the Vice President to turn a new leaf and begin to apologize to Nigerians for the three million jobs a year he and his boss promised, but ended up losing 4.5 million jobs in their first two years according to the Nigerian Bureau of statistics.