President Bola Tinubu says a Naval Officer once slapped him for overcharging him unintentionally when he was a taxi driver in the United States.
The President made this known as his shared stories of humble beginning in a biography published on the back page of a national daily.
The biography titled, ‘Tinubu: My life as gypsy Cab Driver in the US’, was authored by Nigeria’s seasoned journalist, Mike Awoyinfa.
According to Tinubu, in the story, he worked as an unlicensed Taxi Driver in Chicago, the US picking passengers from the airport to their destinations.
The President said the driving job was embarked on in order to sustain him financially before he went to school.
He narrated, “We got an unregistered used car commonly called Gypsy, which we ran as a taxi.
We operated at the airport where we picked passengers, and not anywhere else, like the hotel because it was forbidden for unlicensed cab drivers to do so.
“We did that for a while to raise some money. Bolaji went to Tennessee, while I headed for Chicago.
“I was supposed to have started schooling in April. I deferred it till September in order to have more money. Immediately I got to Chicago, I went straight to Richard Daley College. It was very interesting.
“I was able to pay for my apartment and tuition fees at Chicago State University. I supplemented that by doing different menial jobs like door guard and security man.”
Speaking further about the incident, he said the Naval Officer he picked at the airport slapped him because he overcharged him, as his destination was nearby.
“As a Cab Driver, one experience I will never forget was when I over-charged a Naval Officer who was returning to the country. It was not intentional,” Tinubu said.
“Apparently, I didn’t know the direction. There was no GPRS in those days to locate directions. So, he gave me the direction to his house in a Virginia suburb.
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