Media scholar, Farooq Kperogi, on Monday, labeled the claim that Oseloka Obi, son of Peter Obi, donned a Biafra attire and stepped on the Nigerian flag, as false.
POLITICS NIGERIA reports that Obi, a former governor of Anambra State, is one of the frontline presidential candidates in the 2023 election.
Tweets went viral over the weekend which had the picture of a man standing on Nigeria’s flag, with claims that the person is Oseloka, Obi’s son.
“Oseloka Obi, Peter Obi’s son, standing on Nigeria Flag and putting on IPOB T-Shirt. Today, his dad wants to be President of Nigeria,” a tweet by @OfficialPigo read.
Reacting in a statement this morning, Kperogi said even if the claims were true, it is wrong to visit the “sin” of the son on the father.
“This unidentified IPOB activist stepping on the Nigerian flag while robed in the colors of the Biafran flag is being falsely called Peter Obi’s son by people who resent Obi’s rising national visibility and potential disruption of the certainties of next year’s presidential election,” Kperogi said.
“But even if he were Obi’s son (he isn’t), is it fair to hold Obi responsible for the opinions and choices of his adult son who is at least 30 years old?
“Are pastors and imams responsible for the choices of their children who are now atheists? Should atheist parents take responsibility for their children who’re religious?
“How about puritan parents whose children are now libertines and sexual deviants? Or political liberals whose children are fire-eating conservatives and vice versa?
“All adults have a right to hold opinions that are independent of their parents and that transcend their upbringing.
“If Obi’s son isn’t already a father himself, he is more than old enough to be one. It’s insulting to his intelligence and sense of self to attribute whatever opinions he holds to his father.
“If the choices—in this case, false choices—of a child is all you can invoke to question the motives of a parent, then you really have nothing on that parent.
“I’ve never read, seen, heard, or watched anything that even remotely suggests that Obi is any less patriotic than any other Nigerian.
“It’s legitimate to scrutinize Obi and his records—like we should do to all who aspire to be president—but making up false, scurrilous accusations against him and his son is just intolerably deplorable.”