Buhari: The Price Of Ill-Health
As
Nigerians continue to wait for the return of President Muhammadu Buhari
from his London vacation, Dele Agekameh has talked about what his
ill-health portends for him.
President Muhammadu Buhari
Around the middle of January, Nigerians were told that President
Muhammadu Buhari would be embarking on a 10-day vacation beginning from
Monday, January 23. The announcement clearly stated that he would be
back at his desk on Monday, February 6. At least that was the official
notice from Aso Rock Villa, Nigeria’s seat of power, where Buhari
currently calls the shots.
But shortly after the notice was put out to the public, the
president hastily left the shores of Nigeria on Thursday, January 19,
that is, few days before the vacation was to officially commence. Since
then it has been one new story after another, as speculation has become
rife that the president may have been ill and needed urgent medical
attention in London.
Expectedly, the President’s handlers quickly sprang into action,
trying to debunk rumours that the President was ill. However, in their
attempt to cover up, they have made many goofs and gaffes to the extent
that the information and culture minister, Lai Muhammed, has been on the
receiving end of public anger.
The minister may have unwittingly incurred the wrath of the public
by his insistence that his principal, Buhari, was “hale and hearty”. For
instance, while addressing State House Reporters at the Villa shortly
after the National Executive Council, NEC, meeting on Wednesday,
February 1, the minister said: “I think I can say without any equivocation that he (the President) is well, he is hale and hearty, no question about that.” He did not stop there: “Do
you think Mr. President will be ill and we will be here and going about
our businesses like this? All our ministers are busy. But I want to
assure you that Mr. President is well and he is absolutely in no
danger.”
If Muhammed expected these soothing words to calm the curiosity of
the people, he was dead wrong. Unfortunately, he is not the only one
that has been caught up in this trajectory of trying to explain away the
President’s rumoured illness.
The torrent of alibi and series of explanation over the President’s
health have since shifted to get-well pilgrimages to London by party
stalwarts, politicians and other influential people in the country. That
appears to be the thing now in vogue. Still, the whole drama playing
out cannot hide the fact that the President is indeed indisposed,
contrary to what Nigerians were made to believe.
One of the things that probably gave away the game was the fact
that the President kept on wearing the same kaftan all through the
photo-shots of the numerous get-well visits to him. And in most cases,
he was either in the same sitting position or just taking a few guided
steps to the front door. This is why the elaborate photo-shots with his
hordes of visitors have had little or no positive impact on the psyche
of doubting Nigerians. Not even the very recent photograph of the
president with Bukola Saraki, the Senate President, Yakubu Dogara, the
Speaker of the House of Representatives and Ahmed Lawan, the Senate
Majority Leader, has been able to sway the people.
While the orchestra is going on in faraway London, intense prayer
sessions are simultaneously going on in Nigeria especially in many of
the mosques in the northern part of the country as Muslim faithful there
have resorted to marathon prayers for the President’s quick recovery.
They may have embarked on this bend because the President’s illness is
coming so soon after another prominent northerner from the same state of
Katsina died in office. President Buhari hails from Daura in Katsina
State, while Umaru Yar’Adua, the late president who died on May 5, 2009,
also hailed from Katsina town.
The death of Yar’Adua in 2009 opened the gate for Goodluck
Jonathan, his deputy, to take over the mantle of leadership. The grudge
of the northerners then was that the death of Yar’Adua robbed them of
the golden opportunity to preside over the affairs of the country for at
least eight years. Now, with the unfolding scenario around Buhari,
there is apparent trepidation in the north that what happened in 2009
may happen again. That may be the reason intense prayers are currently
ongoing to avert such a bad occurrence.
At any rate, to underscore the fact that the North is not folding
its arms this time around, few weeks ago, there was wild rumour that
some strong elements of northern extraction in the present government
were mounting pressure on Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, the ebullient vice
president, to resign from office. The reason given by the rumour mongers
was that this will pave the way for Bukola Saraki, the ambitious
president of the Senate who is from the North central geo-political zone
of the country to assume power in the event of anything on toward
happening to Buhari. This will enable the North to retain the number one
spot in the country’s political equilibrium rather than lose it to
another Southerner so soon.
Although Osinbajo has denied this, but Nigeria is a country of
immense possibilities especially in the face of rumours and
counter-rumours on the health condition of the President. The truth is
that the Northern oligarchy loves power and can do anything to retain
it.
Right now, his illness apart, there are many people jostling to
replace Buhari in the 2019 elections. Many of them are familiar faces
but they all have one baggage or the other which will make them
ineligible to be nominated. Again, while some of them are too ambitious
and largely inexperienced, others are like spent bullets that cannot do
anything spectacular anymore. With the simmering crisis within the
ruling APC and the People’s Democratic Party, PDP, on the throes of
death, notwithstanding the recent Appeal Court verdict in Port Harcourt,
no one can be sure of the direction of Nigerian politics come 2019.
There are indications that another political realignment may be in
the offing. And that realignment may exclude some of the present
gladiators in the ruling APC as some of the aggrieved but influential
members of the party may go for broke. On the other hand, the PDP, a
party that once boasted that it would rule Nigeria till infinity, but
was ignominiously defeated in the 2015 elections by a formidable APC,
will try to go into alliance with some mushroom political parties. With
the gale of defections from the PDP which may get worse in the coming
weeks because of the recent Appeal Court verdict, making PDP relevant in
the 2019 election may not be far from a mirage.
My worry is that the APC, as presently constituted, may also find
it a herculean task winning the presidential election in 2019. I foresee
an implosion of the party before then. The options left for the party
is either to reorganise quickly and properly or pave the way for some
prominent members of the party to form a new alliance and subsequently
win the election.
Buhari may be gradually losing favour with the Nigerian electorate
as his health could also be a burden to him in 2019. Even in the North
where he comes from, many of his compatriots appear not very comfortable
with his strides in office. Therefore, the thought of fielding him as
president in 2019 may not arise. And if the economy continues on the
present downward trend, then your guess would be as good as mine!
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Via Dele Agekameh
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