A prominent Nigerian writer and columnist, has penned an interesting and thought-provoking piece over President Muhamamdu Buhari's incessant health challenges and the politics behind it. It's a must read!

Before & After photo of Buhari
Early
this week, I said elsewhere that I do not imagine there could be many
other countries in the world where agents of government play on the
intelligence of their people as Nigeria. Then, I did not realise that
the manipulators of the polity had grander plans coming. And from the
events of the past two days, it is clear that there just will never be
an end to the absurdities that we get around the seat of power in this
country
In my write-up, I talked about the
three-week public non-appearance of President Muhammadu Buhari and the
serial modification of reasons for his failure to show up by government
spokesperson, Alhaji Lai Mohammed.
You will recall
that since his return to the country on March 10, after a 59-day
medical trip abroad, the President would at least appear at the Federal
Executive Council meeting and join other faithful to observe Jumat
service on Fridays.
For a lot of Nigerians who
appreciate the fragile state in which the President appeared on his
return, those two occasions, one in the service of his fatherland and
the other, in satisfaction of his personal spiritual affiliation, were
good enough.
But, on April 12, the President did
not turn up at the weekly FEC meeting. Mohammed informed alarmed
Nigerians that the agenda for that day was too light and insignificant
to demand the Buhari’s attention; hence he ceded the responsibility to
direct the meeting to Vice President Yemi Osinbajo.
The
meeting did not hold the following week and Mohammed was ready for the
nation. He explained that away with some excuse about the Easter
holidays and why things didn’t work together in favour of the meeting.
When
President Buhari did not turn up at the meeting for the third time last
week, the minister bluffed on by saying that his principal had now
chosen to work from home. He was working for the country as files had
been moved to his home office and he got briefings from the VP on a
daily basis.
Governors elected on the platform of
the ruling All Progressives Congress were a bit bolder at telling us off
shortly after. They came out of their first meeting to tell us that it
was not compulsory for Buhari to preside over meetings of the FEC, hence
we should permanently shut up. The nation then patiently waited to see
what would happen at the FEC meeting this week.
But
the minders of the President pre-empted the nation. The day after
speculations that three former heads of state, two of who have been
involved in deciding who leads Nigeria for four out of its five decades
had a clandestine meeting in Minna, Niger State, Buhari came out of his
hibernation. Never mind that no television camera, including that of the
state owned Nigerian Television Authority captured the President at any
time before, during or after his “closed door” meeting with the
Attorney-General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami and the Group
Managing Director of The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Dr
Maikanti Baru.
To further defuse speculations that
Buhari may be terribly ill in such a way that should provoke national
disquiet as suggested by one of his political acquaintances and former
Chairman of the Action Congress of Nigeria, Chief Bisi Akande, wife of
the President, Aisha, got unusual inspiration to tell the nation that
her husband’s health is “not as bad as being perceived.” She went on to
tap into the brief of the duo of Messers Femi Adesina and Shehu Garba,
official spokespersons for the President, to inform us that he was
scheduled to meet Malami and Baru.
Although it
would pass off as very convenient to the careful observer, Mrs. Buhari’s
intervention in the confusion at hand was meant to be a masterstroke to
hold off queries which were beginning to torrent in over the weekend. I
am sorry to say, but it fails in that bid. On the contrary, it has
inspired a desire to interrogate the motives of those who manufacture
these strategies.
From the information that was
shared, Mrs. Buhari just confirmed the fears of all Nigerians that the
President is not exactly in good health, even if Mr. Lai Mohammed always
tried to decorate the facts. The question to ask those who manage the
President, including his wife, is this: if he is not in absolute good
health, why lock him up at the Aso Rock instead of allowing him to seek
medical attention in the United Kingdom as he told Nigerians when his
returned in March? Buhari had at one time or the other confessed to the
overwhelming nature of the job that he took on May 29, 2015, so what
would a country in dire need of urgent leadership and direction gain
from a President who can only function at half capacity.
It
is more telling on the nation because, although the President is unable
to attend to state duties with any vigour and diligence, his presence
in the country, without any form of transition of power to Osinbajo,
restrains the capacity of the Vice President to take those far-reaching
decisions that would move the country forward at the needed pace. This
is one of the reasons why I found Osinbajo’s chairmanship of the
committee probing the suspended Secretary to the Government of the
Federation, Mr. Babachir Lawal and the Director -General of the National
Intelligence Agency, Ambassador Ayo Oke, as comparable to sending a
child on a meaningless errand just to distract him. It all suggests that
Nigeria is currently running on auto pilot and only serving the
interest of a few people.
Sometime last week, a
popular online platform quoted sources as attributing the continued stay
of the President in Nigeria to the ambition of some of the people
around him. In the estimation of the publication, this powerful group
has discouraged Buhari’s medical travel so they will continue to have a
grip of the enormous powers of the Presidency. So for their own personal
gains, they have enslaved and denied him the right to good health. They
also deny the country quality leadership and unwittingly set us back.
But
these friends of Buhari should do more harm to their hostage than they
do anyone else. No matter how long it takes, the people will one day,
have the benefit of good governance whether those who currently hold us
down like it or not. What should be of concern to those who have the
ears of the people currently is getting him in good health and the
legacy that he leaves behind at the end of his tenure, the way
generations of Nigerians will remember him.
Unfortunately,
rather than focus on how to make the best of the next two years to
execute the revolutionary mandate handed Buhari in 2015 to the advantage
of the country and its people, politicians across the Babelic divides
of the APC are busy strategising on how to outsmart each other in 2019,
which is one of the reasons why lying and deception are becoming
prominent tools in high places in Nigeria. But with God, Nigeria will
prevail.
About the Author:
Niran Adedokun is a writer and columnist for Punch newspaper. Follow him on Twitter: @niranadedokun

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