close
Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Buhari, culprit of repeated plagiarism, inaugurates EagleScan detection software

Mr Buhari was the butt of local and international ridicule after plagiarising former U.S. President Barack Obama and former French President Charles de Gaulle’s words.

• April 28, 2021
Buhari and Osibanjo
President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice President Osinbajo

President Muhammadu Buhari’s regime says it has inaugurated a homegrown plagiarism detection software code, ‘EagleScan,’ to enhance the integrity of higher institutions.

Mr Buhari was the butt of local and international ridicule after plagiarising former U.S. President Barack Obama and former French President Charles de Gaulle’s words.

Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, at the inauguration of the software in Abuja on Tuesday, said plagiarism was a form of corruption.

“Let me also say that the government will give all that is needed to ensure that anti-plagiarism measures are instituted across the country,” Mr Osinbajo added.

In 2016, Mr Buhari had part of his speech plagiarised from Mr Obama. Amid public shame, he removed the alleged speechwriter from his team.

But Mr Buhari had also, in his May 2015 inauguration speech, plagiarised from Mr de Gaulle quoted in a book saying, “I am a man who belongs to no one and who belongs to everyone,” while addressing a press conference on May 19, 1958.

According to him, the initiative was part of the core mandates of Mr Buhari’s regime that announced zero tolerance for plagiarism.

Speaking, the Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu, while lauding the indigenous anti-plagiarism software, said it would facilitate higher learning institutions’ desired quality.

Also speaking, the Executive Secretary of the National Universities Commission, Abubakar Rasheed, emphasised the need to institutionalise an anti-plagiarism policy in all higher institutions.

Mr Rasheed said, “Having the software is one aspect of the battle against plagiarism. Universities must take concrete steps to institutionalise an anti-plagiarism policy that forbids all aspects of intellectual theft.

“For so long, the issues of plagiarism amongst others such as copyrights as well as abuses of infringements have robbed our universities the much-desired integrity.”

Similarly, the chairman of the occasion and the Deputy Chairman of the Senate Committee on Higher Education, Sandy Onor, explained further, “The EagleScan plagiarism detection software integrates global open source and closed source repositories, local open education repositories and allows users to validate titles abstracts and generate originality report.”

(NAN)

More from Peoples Gazette

Prof. Yakub Mahmood

Politics

INEC fixes February 18 for 2023 presidential election

The scheduling of the next presidential election comes even as the Senate is yet to pass electoral reform law.

Hajiya Sadiya Umar Farouq

Agriculture

Farmers in Borno, Yobe, 2 other states to get N655 million FG support

The decision was reached at Wednesday’s Federal Executive Council meeting.

Police

States

Police investigating attack on security forces in Anambra: Spokesman

Hoodlums killed no fewer than nine persons in Ukpomachi village, Awkuzu, Oyi Local Government Area of the state early Monday morning.

Heading 3

SSS arrests Usman Bugaje for criticising Buhari’s handling of insecurity

Mr Bugaje, a politician and scholar, was held by state agents after appearing on AIT, Peoples Gazette learnt.

Mr. Femi Adesina (Credit: The Interview)

Economy

FEC approves strategy to address worsening poverty

“It’s not as if the government is not aware that there is poverty in the land but things are being done.”

Minister of Police Affairs, Mohammad Dingyadi and Chinese Ambassador to Nigeria, Cui Jianchun

NationWide

Insecurity: FG looks to China for support

According to the minister, Nigeria is not the only country facing these problems in Africa.