The Senate
President, Dr. Bukola Saraki, has said that a copy of his United Kingdom
passport that was recently posted online was forged.
Saraki, who said
he had contacted his lawyer in the UK to write relevant agencies on the issue,
called for a thorough investigation into the matter.
A scanned copy
of a UK passport carrying the identity of the Senate President has, for weeks,
been trending on the Internet. It was published alongside a report that alleged
that he had sworn an oath of allegiance to the UK.
But Saraki
distanced himself from the passport, though he admitted that he had a UK
citizenship.
“Saraki, on July
19, 2015, instructed his solicitors in UK to write the UK Home Office to
commence an immediate investigation into this act of criminality .There is no
doubt that this is a typical criminal offence against the state and also an act
of defamation of character against the President of the Senate. Whoever is
found responsible should be prosecuted,” Saraki said in a statement posted on
Facebook.
The statement
was signed by his Special Assistant on New Media, Bamikole Omishore.
The former Kwara
State governor was responding to a report by an online media that, being a dual
citizen, he is not qualified to hold a public office in the country.
The report
alleged that Saraki intentionally avoided stating his place of birth while
filling the Independent National Electoral Commission form in order to conceal
his UK citizenship.
The Senate
President argued that his United Kingdom citizenship did not disqualify him
from occupying a public office in Nigeria.
In a tweet, he
said only those who “voluntarily” acquired foreign citizenship could be
disqualified.
He said his
British citizenship was acquired by birth and not “voluntarily,” insisting that
he was qualified for any political office. He argued that the foreign
citizenship was an inalienable right which could not have been forfeited.
“There has
always been a flawed misconception on the issue of dual citizenship vis-a-vis a
holder of public office in Nigeria. Section 28 of the 1999 Constitution (as
amended) deals with this; it highlights the fact that only those who are
Nigerians by registration or naturalisation shall forfeit their citizenship if
they acquire the citizenship of another country.
“It is important to state that the requirement
to forfeit Nigerian nationality/citizenship upon acquisition of the
nationality/citizenship of another country does not apply to persons who are
Nigerians by birth within the definition of Section 25 of the Constitution.
This section also acknowledges and protects the right to hold citizenship by
birth of another country.
“Citizens of a
country by birth do not need to swear to an oath of allegiance to that country.
It is only a citizenship acquired through naturalisation and registration that
has the requirement to take an oath of allegiance,” he continued on Facebook.
According to
him, there is no evidence that he sworn an oath of allegiance to the UK. He
claimed he had never denied holding the foreign citizenship, adding, “Holding
dual citizenship does not mean that a public office holder had changed his
nationality in the past.
“It simply means
he has held both citizenships simultaneously without the need to acquire one
after the other. As both were acquired by birth, the Senate President
automatically had both citizenships bestowed on him from the moment of his
birth.”
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