Ekiti State
Governor, Mr Ayodele Fayose has questioned President Muhammadu Buhari’s
persistent absence from state functions, especially the weekly Federal
Executive Council (FEC) meetings, asking whether or not the president was now
governing the country by proxy.
Accoding to vanguardngr, he said; “Every day, what we hear is President
said this, President said that without seeing the President in any official
function and one is prompted to ask; where is the president?”
Fayose in a release issued in Ado Ekiti on Thursday,
by his Special Assistant on Public
Communications and New Media, Lere Olayinka,
said it was becoming obvious that a group of cabal is exercising the
powers of the President.
“I saw the Secretary to the Government of the
Federation (SGF), Mr Babachir Lawal on television responding to his suspension
and what came to my mind was that there could actually be many presidents
operating in the Buhari’s presidency.
“Perhaps, it is for this reason of
possible existence of governments within the government of Buhari that
confusion pervades the polity, with the President himself writing letter to the
Senate to clear someone of wrongdoing and the same person being suspended three
months after on the basis of the same allegation.
It is also for this reason
that the President nominated Ibrahim Magu to the Senate for confirmation as
EFCC Chairman and the DSS, an agency under the Presidency wrote the Senate not
to confirm him.
“Most importantly, the President did not attend the FEC meeting
last week and the meeting did not hold this week under the flimsy excuse that
Easter Break stalled it.
How could Easter Break that ended on Monday be
responsible for the inability to hold FEC meeting on Wednesday? Definitely,
there is more to this than meets the eye. “It has therefore become necessary
that Nigerians hear the voice of their President and see him physically, not
through surrogates or the cabal operating behind the scene,” the governor said.
Speaking further, Governor Fayose, who described a President as the face and
image of a nation, urged President Buhari to hold regular media chat in which
Nigerians can ask questions and offer suggestions on the running of the
country.
“Since his first and only media chat was held in December 2015,
Nigerians have not had opportunity of seeing their President address them
directly and this is not the best approach to governance in a democracy,” he
said.
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