No law is
breached, presidency insists
• ‘Cabal has
captured Aso Rock’
• Nigeria
needs a younger leader in 2019, says speaker at Chatham House
Two months
after he returned from his medical sojourn in London, United Kingdom
(UK) for
an undisclosed ailment, President Muhammadu Buhari still operates from his
official residence located in the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
The
president had, two days after returning from the medical vacation which spanned
103 days, written to the National Assembly, in line with constitutional
provisions, intimating the parliament of his return to the country and
resumption of office in the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
The letter
dated August 21, 2017 stated in part: “In compliance with Section 145 of the
1999 Constitution (as amended), I write to intimate that I have resumed my
functions as the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria with effect from
Monday, 21st August, 2017, after my medical follow-up in the United Kingdom.”
But barely
settling down to take charge of activities of state, news broke that the
president would temporarily operate from his official residence located in the
villa due to the renovation of his main office. A presidency source had told
The Guardian that construction giant, Julius Berger, had already begun the
renovation.
Also
confirming the development, Personal Assistant to the President on New Media,
Bashir Ahmad, explained through his twitter handle@BashirAhmaad why Buhari was
working from home. “Some renovations are ongoing at the office. He’ll be back
to the main office after the work,” he twitted.
It was
learnt that the renovation was a result of the damage rodents had caused after
they invaded Buhari’s office.
A foreign
news agency quoted the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba
Shehu, as saying that while President Buhari was away on the medical follow-up,
rats had a field day with the furniture, cables and air-conditioning units in
his office.
“He has been
using the residential office. What is important is that the job gets done.
Whether he does it from his bedroom or his sitting room or his anteroom, it
does not matter. Let the job be done. And the job will be done,” he said.
However, two
months after, the president still shuttles between the office in his official
residence and the new banquet hall located beside the main office, where he
occasionally receives visitors.
How long the
renovation would last has not been disclosed by the presidency.
A text
message sent to the two presidential spokesmen, Femi Adesina and Garba Shehu,
for the presidency’s reaction to the matter was not immediately responded to.
“Good evening sir. In August, we were told the president would be operating
from his official residence due to renovation being done in his office by
Julius Berger. The Guardian would appreciate a confirmation of when the
president will start to work from his main office. Thank you sir. Regards,” The
Guardian wrote in the text message.
But later in
the night Shehu, responded this way: “No section of the law or constitution is
breached. The entire presidential complex is both office and home to the
president. He is right to use any part as his office so long as the job gets
done.”
Meanwhile,
the battle for the country’s topmost job in 2019, assumed a different narrative
at the Chatham House – Royal Institute of International Affairs – yesterday
afternoon during the third series of the six-part “Next Generation Nigeria”
initiative of the world renowned institute.
At the
event, the guest speaker, Samson Itodo, indirectly threw a spanner in the wheel
of those campaigning for President Buhari to seek a second term on the platform
of his party, the All Progressives Congress (APC) in 2019.
Itodo, who
is the Head of Research, Policy and Advocacy, Youth Initiative for Advocacy,
Growth and Advancement (YIAGA) in Abuja, advised that the president should not
bother throwing his hat in the ring again by reason of his age and health, for
which he famously had two medical vacations of more than 100 days in London
between March and August this year.
“The type of
leadership we have in the country today is not the type we need if we want to
move from being a developing nation to a developed nation,” he said, fielding
questions from the audience.
Condemning
the inertia that trailed the early part of the Buhari administration, Itodo
added that the president was probably not ready for office after being sworn in
on May 29, 2015. He argued that Nigeria did “not need a president who did not
constitute his cabinet in six months” to come back for another term in 2019.
According to
him, while Buhari may have good intentions for the country, there is a cabal
running the presidency against his wishes. “Aso Rock is captured, and the cabal
is having a field day. And though the president means well for the country, he
has his health challenges, and the circumstances around him mean we need a
younger president in 2019.”
Itodo, who
spoke on “Next Generation Nigeria: Youth, Opportunity and Governance for the
Future”, also said that the country was not ready for the next general
elections. “We are not ready for 2019 because many electoral commission boards
are not properly constituted.”
He called
for young people to show more interest in politics and for them to be given
opportunities. “Democracy is about inclusion, especially for the youths and
women. Restructuring will make no sense to the youths of Nigeria if it does not
put people at the centre of governance, especially young people,” he said.
The Chatham
House Next Generation Nigeria will feature three more speakers, having already
hosted Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai and the President General
of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, John Nwodo in the opening two rounds of the six-part
series.
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