Reno Omokri @renoomokri Concerning the Statements Made Against Me by Mr Omoyele Sowore, Through His Lawyer in Court
With regard to the claims made by Mr Omoyele Sowore and his counsel, Mr Abubakar Marshal, in court on Tuesday, January 27, 2026, I do freely admit that I did make uncomplimentary remarks about the then Presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress, while believing those comments to be true at the time I uttered them.
Subsequent to making those statements, I discovered that they were not, in fact, true, and I publicly withdrew them in writing and on video at various times and through multiple platforms.
On the day that Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu was sworn in as President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, which was Monday, May 29, 2023, I released a statement affirming him as President of Nigeria and urging members of the public to put the past behind them and give him their full support.
I repeated this stance and public call on Thursday, October 26, 2023, the day the Supreme Court of Nigeria ruled in favour of the President, after dismissing the petitions against him brought by Alhaji Waziri Atiku Abubakar, and Mr Peter Obi, amongst others.
In that judgment, the honourable court declared that there were no criminal charges or convictions against the President. It clarified what had happened in the past, which had been misrepresented by some media.
On the same day the judgement was rendered, I accepted it, applauded it, and stated that, based on that verdict, my stance on the statements I had made against the President had changed: not only was it wrong, but I fully believed it was fallacious.
Two days thereafter, on Saturday, October 28, 2023, I gave an interview to TVC, in which I affirmed the Supreme Court's judgement and declared it a righteous verdict and that their Lord Justices did a good job and followed the letter and spirit of the law.
When members of the Peoples Democratic Party, to which I was then aligned, continued to dwell on those unfounded allegations, I arranged to be interviewed on Newscentral Television on Thursday, March 27, 2025, where I said that the President had been "exonerated", a word that I used intentionally, as I have a Master’s in Law from the United Kingdom, and understood and wanted to project and confirm to the Nigerian public that a constitutionally recognised official body had absolved the President of any wrongdoing, which is the legal meaning of that word.
Following this, I went on the most watched talk show in Nigeria, Politics Today, on Wednesday, June 11, 2025, where I admitted to the Nigerian public and the world at large during a live broadcast that I was wrong about those statements I made about the then candidate, and that I relied on false publications in the media in making them, and that having gotten accurate judicial pronouncements that exonerated the President and established beyond any reasonable doubt that the information I had erroneously believed, chiefly from Mr Omoyele Sowore's platform, Saharareporters, and from the mouth of Mr Sowore himself, was false, I withdrew those statements and apologised for them.
Prior to that, I had sought a private audience with the President himself on October 1, 2024, where I flew into Nigeria from my home in California, and apologised to him in person, prostrating flat on the ground, before stating that I was misled by publications in the media into making those statements, and that my actions were not malicious, but that I was then labouring under a mistaken belief that what I had read in the media was true, when in fact it was wrong.
Finally, in law, it is ultra vires, and well established by the rule against hearsay, to use previous statements made at a time when it was believed to be true to establish the veracity of a claim you yourself caused to be published, or to justify yourself or offer a defence, when the maker of that statement has admitted that the statements were made in good faith, but subsequently found to be untrue, and then publicly withdrawn, with various attempts at restitution made by the author of those statements you seek to rely on.
Quoting from Phipson on Evidence, relied on by the Privy Council in the defining case of Teper v. R and followed by common law jurisdictions, including Nigeria, “Former oral or written statements by any person, whether or not he is a witness in the proceedings, may not be given in evidence if the purpose is to tender them as evidence of the truth of the matters asserted”.
Therefore, Mr Sowore cannot rely on statements I made between 2022 and 2023, and then publicly withdrew in 2023, as a defence for statements he made in August 2025, more than two years after I made those remarks, especially as both he himself and his platform, Saharareporters, had originated those statements over a decade ago.
I again affirm today, as I have proclaimed multiple times since Thursday, October 26, 2023, that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is not, has never been, and will never be a drug lord. He is a person of good character, high moral standing, and a professed Muslim, with the largeness of heart to forgive his enemies and opponents when they realise the error of their ways and recant, which is, amongst other reasons, why he is uniquely and particularly suited to lead a multiethnic, multicultural, multi-religious, and multiracial country like Nigeria.
I make these statements voluntarily, freely and of my own volition, knowing them to be true, and I am fully prepared to testify to the above under oath in court, along with the tendering of documentary and dated, timestamped evidence establishing the veracity of the affirmations here made.
Thank you.
Bemigho Reno Omokri https://x.com/i/status/2016421000926081092
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The old problem is being solved naptu2: This is another side story from the transport series.
The BRT inherited a lot of facilities from the old LSTC. This included the Obalende Terminus and the Keffi Bus Stop. I think I need to explain those two places.
Obalende
There is a serious problem with the place called Obalende Bus Stop and that problem exists till today. The problem is tied to the question, where is Obalende Bus Stop?
There isn't an actual bus stop at the place called Obalende Bus Stop and commercial buses just stop anywhere on the road in the area around Obalende Road, Ikoyi Road, Obalende Roundabout and the approaches to Lewis Street, Moloney Street and Igbosere Road.
Commercial buses often stopped underneath the flyover and just before the ramp to the Third Mainland Bridge during the Shagari/Jakande era. In fact, the bus drivers sometimes bribed the traffic warden on duty, so that he would stop traffic long enough for them to load passengers. This was quite dangerous because that area was the route that senior government officials like the IGP and the service chiefs used when going to the office in the morning.
The only proper bus stop was the LSTC terminal, but that was reserved exclusively for LSTC buses.
Governor Marwa wanted to solve this problem (in the 1990s), so he devised a solution. The LSTC system had stopped working before he became governor, so he opened up the LSTC terminal to the regular yellow and black commercial buses. The Lagos State Task Force (soldiers and mobile policemen) were deployed to prevent buses from stopping on the road and the buses were allowed to drive into the LSTC terminus, pick passengers there and then drive out without obstructing traffic.
Governor Fashola retrieved the LSTC terminus from the yellow and black buses and used it as a terminus for the BRT system. However, before doing that, he constructed a new bus stop for the yellow and black buses and that bus stop was beside and underneath the Ring Road system (aka Third Mainland Bridge).
However, Governor Akinwunmi Ambode came and undid a lot of the things that Fashola had done. He deployed mobile policemen and policemen from the Lagos State Task Force to the bus stop of the yellow and black buses and arrested everybody there. He also used heavy earthmoving equipment to destroy the structures that Fashola had built.
So we are back to square 1. There is no real bus stop for the yellow and black buses and they just stop on the road to pick passengers.
Keffi
There was also a large park for the LSTC at the junction of Keffi Street and Awolowo Road. You could also get good snacks at that bus stop in the late 1970s and early 1980s. That bus stop reminds me of the Scholars Bus.
Governor Lateef Jakande converted some of the LSTC buses into Scholars Buses and they carried school children (in uniform) to and from school free of charge. You might remember that there are a lot of primary and secondary schools near the Keffi area and so that bus stop was always filled with school children.
That large bus stop fell into disuse in the late 1980s. Weed and area boys took over the place. The place was basically abandoned by the government.
Governor Fashola rehabilitated the place and used it as a depot for the BRT system. BRT buses were parked there over night and it even had its own petrol station. There was tight security in the compound and I heard that they had installed facilities for cleaning the buses.
However, Governor Ambode closed the BRT depot and instead, Ibile Holdings, the company that's owned by the Lagos State Government, began constructing a tower block on the site.
There's the belief among some Lagos State officials that land is Lagos State's equivalent of crude oil. They believe that it brings in a lot of revenue, particularly in certain very expensive areas, and therefore, public facilities in those places should be converted to office blocks and other such facilities that can bring in revenue. This is one of the reasons that some Lagos State officials have been trying to close the Ikoyi Prison (they believe that there shouldn't be a prison on such prime real estate).
(I will probably post a link to this in the transport series). |