2 years ago
TheCable checked some of the claims, and here is what we found.
CLAIM 1: Abraham Lincoln, one of America’s famous leaders, contested the presidency five to six times before he eventually won.
VERDICT: False.
Abraham Lincoln never contested the presidential election five or six times as Atiku claimed.
Lincoln won his first bid for the presidency in 1860 and was re-elected in 1864.
He was the 16th president of the United States. He was assassinated at Ford’s Theatre, Washington DC by John Wilkes Booth. He died the following day on April 15, 1865.
CLAIM 2: There is no law stopping public officers from doing business in Nigeria.
VERDICT: False. The Nigerian legislation does not permit full-time public officers to run businesses, save for farming.
Section 6(b) of the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB) and Tribunal Act only allows public servants to engage and participate in running a farm, either subsistence or commercial.
The same provision is found in sections 2 (a) and (b) of the fifth schedule to the 1999 Constitution.
Timi Olagunju, a legal practitioner and policy analyst, told TheCable that section 6 of the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB) and Tribunal Act is quite clear on the matter.
“The CCB is an act of parliament backed by the constitution. It is legislation, not a subsidiary or a by-law. Section 6 clarifies that a public office holder, shall not engage or participate in any private business, trade, or profession, except for farming, basically to promote agriculture,” he said.
“It is important to note that the law provides an exemption. The public officer can engage in private business if he is employed on a part-time basis.”
Olagunju however noted that in his years of practice, he is yet to see a public officer get convicted for running a business while occupying a public office.
CLAIM 3: Egypt has a population of about 80 million, and more than two million policemen.
VERDICT: Both claims are false.
There is no substantial evidence to back the claim that Egypt has two million police officers.
According to the 2015 Home Office analysis of the Egyptian armed forces, the Egyptian National Police Force has approximately 350,000 personnel responsible for law enforcement and maintaining public order across the country.
The total strength of Egypt’s armed forces was estimated, in September 2014, at 458,500 (army: 340,000, air force: 100,000, navy: 18,500), with a total of 479 000 reserves.
The total sum of all the armed forces of Egypt is still less than Atiku’s “two million” figure.
According to a 2017 report released by Worldatlas, which listed the top thirty countries by number of police officers, China came top with 1.6 million, followed by India and the United States with 1,585,353 and 913,161 respectively.
No country in the top 30 had two million police officers — and Egypt was not on the list compiled by Worldatlas.
Meanwhile, according to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), Egypt’s current population stands at 106.2 million and not 80 million.
CLAIM 4: The oil sector represents 20 percent of Nigeria’s GDP.
VERDICT: The claim is false.
Data made available by Statista showed that between the fourth quarter of 2018 and the third quarter of 2021, the contribution of the oil sector to the country’s GDP was less than 10 percent.
TheCable also checked data released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), and found that the highest oil sector contribution between 2019 and 2021 was 9.77 percent — in the third quarter of 2019
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