Africa
The Whitewashing of Seyi Tinubu: A Tale of Elite Impunity and National Disgrace -By Ayo Akin-Olugbade
The PR firms, with their sugar-coated narratives, seek to blind us to the truth. They want us to forget that Seyi Tinubu is the son of an election rigger, a man whose path to power was paved with deceit and manipulation. They want us to ignore the fact that his wealth, his lifestyle, is built on the backs of a people who can barely survive. But we will not be silenced. We will not be blinded. We will speak truth to power, with every fiber of our being, with every word we write.
In the hallowed halls of power, where the air is thick with the scent of privilege and the echoes of unearned accolades, a new narrative is being spun. The presidency’s PR consultants, armed with the finest tools of deception, are embarking on a audacious rebrand of Seyi Tinubu, the scion of Nigeria’s most controversial president. They seek to paint a picture of a benevolent philanthropist, a caring elite, a man of the people. But let us pull back the curtain on this charade, for the truth is as stark as the poverty that grips our nation.
Seyi Tinubu, the son of a man whose rise to power is marred by allegations of election rigging, drug cartel connections, and a legacy of embezzlement, is now being touted as a paragon of virtue. The irony is not lost on those of us who have watched, with growing despair, as the Tinubu family transforms Nigeria into a playground for their excesses while millions of our youth languish in abject poverty. This is not a story of redemption; it is a story of whitewashing, of rewriting history with the ink of privilege and the brush of impunity.
Let us begin with the Lekki Toll Gate scandal, a wound that refuses to heal in the collective memory of Nigerians. On that fateful night in October 2020, as peaceful protesters demanded an end to police brutality, Seyi Tinubu’s name became synonymous with the blood that stained the asphalt. The judicial panel confirmed it: unprovoked military violence, a massacre that left at least 11 #EndSARS protesters dead. Yet, here we are, five years later, with PR firms working overtime to erase that memory, to replace it with images of Seyi as a humanitarian, a patron of the arts, a friend to the common man. The audacity is breathtaking.
And then there is the matter of nepotism, a disease that has metastasized within the corridors of power. Seyi Tinubu, elevated above international businessmen competitors not by merit, but by the sheer force of his father’s influence, stands as a testament to the rot that defines our governance. While entrepreneurs struggle to navigate the treacherous waters of Nigerian bureaucracy, Seyi sails smoothly, his path cleared by the invisible hand of presidential privilege. This is not leadership; it is a mockery of meritocracy, a slap in the face to every Nigerian who dares to dream of a fair chance.
But let us not forget the personal scandals that paint a portrait far removed from the caring elite the PR machine seeks to create. Affairs, alleged children out of wedlock, a lifestyle that reeks of entitlement—these are not the hallmarks of a man who cares for his people. No, Seyi Tinubu is a man who has spent more on bottles in the club than the cost of every Bible ever distributed in Africa throughout history. A man who boasts a fleet of luxury cars, an alleged harem, and penthouses in New York, London, and Lagos, while millions of Nigerian youth cannot afford a single meal. This is not opulence; it is obscenity.
The hypocrisy is staggering. The same elite who demand praise and obeisance, who seek to elevate themselves to celebrity status, are the ones who have plundered our nation’s resources. They live in luxury, their grotesque lavish expenses a stark contrast to the crippling poverty that defines the lives of ordinary Nigerians. I am a journalist, yes, but I am also a Nigerian, deeply angry, profoundly affected by the state of affairs that has reduced us to beggars in our own land. I see the hunger in the eyes of children, the despair in the faces of mothers, and I cannot remain silent.
The PR firms, with their sugar-coated narratives, seek to blind us to the truth. They want us to forget that Seyi Tinubu is the son of an election rigger, a man whose path to power was paved with deceit and manipulation. They want us to ignore the fact that his wealth, his lifestyle, is built on the backs of a people who can barely survive. But we will not be silenced. We will not be blinded. We will speak truth to power, with every fiber of our being, with every word we write.
And so, I ask you, dear reader, to look beyond the glossy images, the carefully crafted statements. Look at the reality of Nigeria, a nation where the elite feast while the masses starve. Look at Seyi Tinubu, not as the philanthropist they want you to see, but as a symbol of everything that is wrong with our country. Let us laugh, yes, at the absurdity of it all, but let us also rage, for rage is the only response to such injustice. And let us remember, always, that the truth, no matter how buried, will one day rise again.
