Nigeria’s Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed has asked the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and its presidential candidate in the 2019 general elections, Atiku Abubakar to apologize to Nigerians for willfully distracting the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari.

 Lai Mohammed, in a statement issued on Thursday from St Petersburg, Russia said the PDP went to the Presidential Election Tribunal with a frivolous petition.

He claimed that while the PDP and Atiku reserved the right to pursue their petition to the highest level, ‘they will be better served by dropping their toga of desperation and realizing that there is a limit to tomfoolery’.

“Nigerians are tired of this orchestrated distraction and will rather wish that the opposition, having lost at the polls and in court will now join hands with the government to move Nigeria to the next level.

“This is more so that the judgement validating the re-election of President Muhammadu Buhari was unanimous that the petition lacked merit, that the petitioners failed to prove any of the grounds upon which their case was anchored and that President Buhari is eminently qualified to contest the poll,” he said. 

Mohammed said instead of casting aspersion on the judiciary with their poorly-framed reaction to the ruling of the tribunal, the PDP and its candidate should thank their stars that they were not being prosecuted for coming to court with fraudulently-obtained evidence.

He added: “It is intriguing that a party that trumpets the rule of law at every turn will present, in open court, evidence it claimed to have obtained by hacking into a supposed INEC server.

“Don’t they realize this is a criminal act for which they are liable? Instead of threatening to head to the Supreme Court, driven more by ego than commonsense. They should be sorry for allowing desperation to overwhelm their sense of reasoning. Enough is enough.”

Mohammed also commended the five-man panel of the tribunal for not only doing justice to the case but for also using several hours in painstakingly explaining the details on how it arrived at its final judgement.