Tag: Muhammadu Buhari

  • Musings on Muhammadu Buhari – By Azu Ishiekwene

    Musings on Muhammadu Buhari – By Azu Ishiekwene

    I met him several times after he became Nigeria’s president in 2015, but the meetings did not change my impression of him as an enigma. Yet, as history peels back layer after layer of Muhammadu Buhari’s place, we may discover the essence of his beguiling simplicity.

    Tight-lipped and taciturn, a soldier in bearing and character, his life was marked by complex dimensions that shaped his political and personal trajectory. 

    Escape route
    Born on December 17, 1942, in Daura, northwest Nigeria, in a region now fraught with banditry and violent crimes, Buhari began his military career by joining the Nigerian Army in 1961. In a viral video, Buhari told his interviewer and former Minister of Communications and Digital Economy, Sheikh Ali Pantami, in Hausa that the army was an escape route to avoid being yoked with a bride in his early years – a culture still practised widely among his ethnic stock. 

    A less-publicised version of the story was that after losing his father at an early age, leaving him with very little family support, he went into the military to avoid being a burden to his maternal uncle.

    Trained in Nigeria, Britain, India, and the United States, he fought in the Nigerian Civil War under the command of Olusegun Obasanjo’s Third Marine Commando Division. These exposures would likely shape his world view and disdain for a society where accountability had assumed a nebulous character and systems were being undermined. 

    Based on personal character and principle, Buhari would be selected by other military accomplices dissatisfied with the civilian administration’s economic management to lead the government after toppling the civilian administration of Alhaji Shehu Shagari in 1983.

    These same accomplices would later find him too rigid, too stiff, and perhaps too honest. Like they had done to Shagari, they mobilised and rendered Buhari harmless through a palace coup barely two years later. Then they kept him in detention and solitary confinement for three years. He was in detention when his mother died, and his request to pay his final respects before her burial was declined, deepening his animosity with the Babangida regime. 

    A cult hero
    Except for the legend of Ahmadu Bello or perhaps Aminu Kano, no individual in northern Nigeria has commanded the cult following and mass appeal that Buhari had. His reputation as an honest man effortlessly earned him a fanatical followership among ordinary folks. It became his best political capital, which, despite himself, was used to drag him into politics, a terrain a reclusive Buhari would have viewed from a distance. 

    His mass appeal was widely feared by the northern elite, who lacked the ordinary people’s trust. That appeal became a free vehicle on which many a political aspirant, without Buhari’s kind of credibility and self-denial, rode to political office. All they needed was to claim allegiance with Mai Gaskiya – the honest man.

    Emotionally reserved, often projecting an image of stern seriousness, Buhari frequently left political associates guessing. His reserve contrasted sharply with the more charismatic and transactional disposition of Nigerian political figures, creating a mystique and ambivalence. His silence was a rather strange component of political dialectics.

    Disdain for opulence
    Buhari maintained a public image marked by disdain for corruptly acquired wealth and materialism. He frequently admonished people in public office to live by their means. 

    It is speculated in some circles that his separation from his first wife and mother of his first five children, Safinatu, was due to what he considered extravagant overtures made to her by Babangida’s wife, Maryam, while he was in detention. Until the end, there was no love lost between Buhari and Babangida – a fact once made bare in Buhari’s angry response to my question about the report of a military panel that advised Babangida’s removal before the 1985 coup.

    His effort to promote governance that emphasised detachment from corruption and extravagance became flaccid under civil governance, where he delegated authority but failed to provide necessary supervisory oversight. 

    The war he never won

    Divested of military authority, Buhari’s passion for rooting out corruption became an albatross. His Aviation Minister, Hadi Sirika, promised the nation a national airline that has become a reference for public ridicule and sheer callousness. His Minister for Justice, Abubakar Malami, brazenly waged turf wars and executed a vendetta on anticorruption officials. If you thought Buhari would be livid, he surprised everyone by doing nothing.

    Despised by the elite and profiled by the media as a dictator, Buhari became a hostage in trying to prove he was a full convert to the democratic ethos. Only a Buhari would sit by and watch a minority party share strategic offices in the military, federal cabinet, and choice federal agencies overseen by the National Assembly, where his party had absolute control. 

    Cabinet appointees fully exploited such ambivalence, mostly career politicians with decades of experience gaming the system. It is, however, a credit to him that his non-interference in party issues and legislative processes strengthened the democratic process. 

    June 12 ‘coup’
    Buhari’s military boss, Olusegun Obasanjo, reaped the windfall of the June 12 political impasse to placate Nigeria’s turn-by-turn political system. But it shall remain to the eternal credit of Buhari that he took deliberate action to resolve what had become a chasm on the country’s political map. 

    He went on to resolve other festering issues like settling veterans of the Nigerian Civil War on the Biafran side who had been abandoned; paying off the liabilities of Nigerian Airways employees liquidated by the Obasanjo administration; and fulfilling commitments made to the national football team by previous administrations after decades of official dubiousness and treachery.  

    Tough luck
    Buhari won the presidency in 2015, and almost like a blast from a whistle, falling oil prices triggered a recession in the economy he had inherited on a false foundation. The country faced dramatic challenges, which heavily impacted oil production, with youth in the oil-producing Niger Delta, from where Buhari’s predecessor hailed, doubling down on the sabotage of oil infrastructure as vengeance for losing the 2015 elections. 

    Again, on the morning of his second term, the world took a hit from the COVID pandemic, which sent an already tottering economy closer to the cliff. The lockdowns sped up inflation and affected Buhari’s efforts to boost domestic food production. His frail health didn’t help matters.

    Tunnel vision
    Buhari’s tunnel vision focused intensely on anti-corruption and security, sometimes at the expense of broader governance issues. Thirty years after he left power and regained it, his mind still seemed frozen in the past compared with other rulers who benefited from a broader worldview even after leaving office.

    This hampered his administration’s responsiveness to diverse socio-economic challenges. Issues like grazing routes and cattle colonies became fissures on an already fragile geopolitical balancing, in addition to perceived bias in political appointments.

    Near abdication 

    If indifference and aloofness plagued Buhari’s presidency, this became even more palpable towards the conclusion of his second term. Unconcerned about the succession struggles within his party and the political manoeuvres of his central bank governor, who unleashed a self-serving currency redesign policy on the country, Buhari was signing off with low approval ratings even from his popular home base. The results manifested in the subsequent national elections.

    The nation railed and whined that its president had no school certificate. Dissident groups contrived false images and spread malicious rumours that Buhari had died and that a “Jibril from Sudan” was the effigy in Aso Rock. Political engineers improvised a marriage in which the president was supposed to take his cabinet minister as a new wife – they even printed invitation cards. They must all have been confounded by Buhari’s superhuman silence. Or sometimes, by his sense of irony.

    ‘Baba Go-Slow’

    For example, when I visited him with core Buharist and founding Chairman of LEADERSHIP, Sam Nda-Isaiah, a few months after the 2015 election, I was spooked by Buhari’s sense of humour. The Guardian on Sunday was among the pile of newspapers on a side table that day. He lingered on a page and lowered the paper. “Nda,” he said, which was how he called the LEADERSHIP publisher. “Who is the tortoise in this cartoon?”

    “It’s you,” Sir. Nda-Isaiah replied. The cartoon was labelled ‘Baba Go-Slow’, a stinging commentary that it was taking him months to name his cabinet. 

    “You mean this is me?” Buhari exploded in laughter. Given the country’s desperate situation at the time, the humour was lost on me. But that, sometimes, was Buhari for you.

    Ishiekwene is the Editor-in-Chief of LEADERSHIP and author of the book, Writing for Media and Monetising It.

  • Generations will feel Buhari’s absence – Tinubu

    Generations will feel Buhari’s absence – Tinubu

    President Bola Tinubu on Thursday eulogised the late former President Muhammadu Buhari and suggested that his absence will be felt for generations.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports President Tinubu made the suggestion when he led his cabinet ministers, the Secretary to the Government, two state governors, and the Head of Service in a solemn tribute to the late former president.

    The ceremony at a special session of the Federal Executive Council honoured the eighth Nigerian leader—a civil war hero, a former military head of state, and an anti-corruption advocate —who passed away on July 13, leaving a legacy of discipline and patriotism.

    President Tinubu, who opened the floodgates of tributes in the presence of the departed leader’s children, renamed the 50-year-old University of Maiduguri Muhammadu Buhari University.

    President Tinubu stated that generations would feel the absence of a leader whose presence had stirred their convictions.

    The President praised Buhari as a fearless defender of the unity of the nation with a unique leadership style, as well as a character defined by discipline, sincerity and unwavering display of compassion.

    “Today, we gather under a heavy shadow, drawn from the silence that surrounds a departed leader and the immense weight of a life whose absence will be felt for generations.

    “We meet to honour a man whose presence once commanded this very room, whose voice once summoned the best in us, and whose convictions never bowed, even to the strongest winds of public opinion. President Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR, former Head of State and former President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, has gone to rest.

    “He was first among soldiers in war, first among citizens in peace, and first, without ambition or flattery, in the hearts of his fellow citizens.

    “Yet it was in the quiet and unadorned settings of his private life that his true greatness was revealed: pious without show, just without cruelty, humane without sentimentality, temperate without coldness, and sincere without guile,” Tinubu said.

    President Tinubu affirmed that Buhari’s leadership qualities and unimpeachable integrity endeared him to many, from his chosen career as a military man to the administrative and political positions he held, culminating in his headship of the country in uniform and as a democrat.

    According to the President, “To his peers, he was respectful and without pretence. To those who served under him, he was kind without condescension. And, to those whom he loved most intimately, he was unfailingly tender, loyal, and good. His life was a rebuke to vice and a refuge for virtue. The purity of his private character gave radiance to the discipline and integrity of his public service.

    “President Buhari’s life was one of austere honour. He stood, always, ramrod straight; unmoved by the temptation of power, unseduced by applause and unafraid of the loneliness that often visits those who do what is right, rather than what is popular. His was a quiet courage, a righteousness that never announced itself. His patriotism was lived more in action than in words.

    “Yet, with all that he had achieved, his most enduring legacy would be carved in democracy. In a time when many had lost hope that change was possible, Muhammadu Buhari put his faith in the people of this country.”

    President Tinubu urged Nigerians to be guided by the late President Buhari’s life of humility, moral rectitude, incorruptibility, and compassion.

    “President Buhari was not a perfect man – no leader is – but he was, in every sense of the word, a good man, a decent man, an honourable man. His record will be debated, as all legacies are, but the character he brought to public life, the moral force he carried, the incorruptible standard he represented, will not be forgotten. His life was lived in full service to Nigeria, and in fidelity to God.

    Minister of Budget and Economic Planning Senator Abubakar Bagudu, in his tribute, revealed a letter sent to the APC Governors Forum by former President Buhari in the aftermath of the APC Presidential Primaries, won by President Tinubu.

    In the June 9, 2022, letter, President Buhari rallied the APC governors to ensure Tinubu’s victory, contrary to some notions that Buhari was indifferent to Tinubu’s presidential campaign.

    “Our candidate, His Excellency Senator Bola Ahmed Tinubu, is no stranger to you. He is our friend and brother”, President Buhari wrote. “We know his commitment, his track record and his capacity to lead our party to success. So now is the time for all of us to come together and march forward, as we did in 2025, to a convincing APC victory.

    “I look forward to working closely with APC Governors to support Senator Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu and all our APC candidates to success in 2023”, Buhari added.

    Senate President Godswill Akpabio described the late President Buhari as a very principled man who, although not perfect, was good and utterly uninterested in personal comfort, prioritising duty above all else.

    “Buhari is remembered as a man who gave everything he had to a country that asked everything of him. His life reflected basic simplicity and integrity, reminding that goodness is not always loud and that history applauds those who live for legacy over fame,” Akpabio said.

    The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Tajudeen Abbas, described the late President as a man whose life and legacy are deeply woven into the fabric of our nation.

    “President Buhari was not an ordinary figure in our national journey. He embodied quiet strength, moral clarity and an unshakable sense of duty. At a time when society was seduced by materialism, he chose a life of modesty and service. He was devoted to family and steadfast in his Islamic faith,” he said.

    The Chairman of the Nigerian Governors’ Forum and Kwara State Governor, Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq, highlighted the late President’s legacies, describing him as a patriot, statesman, and devoted servant of the Nigerian people.

    Minister of Solid Minerals, Dele Alake, said Buhari’s life was defined by unwavering faith and integrity, calling on Nigerians to reflect and reignite our hope in a greater tomorrow.

    The Coordinating Minister of Health and Social Welfare, Ali Pate, the Minister of Works, Dave Umahi, the Aviation Minister, Festus Keyamo, the Minister of Women Affairs, Imaan Suliaman-Ibrahim, and the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Didi Walson-Jack, also delivered tributes.

    Yusuf Buhari, the son of the late President, expressed the family’s gratitude to Nigerians from all walks of life, including members of the diplomatic community, for the honour bestowed on his father in death.

    He commended President Tinubu, Vice President Shettima, and their wives for the outstanding support received by the family from the time their father fell ill until his departure on Sunday, July 13, 2025.

    “It showed that he was regarded far more than a politician, but regarded as a friend and a father to all,” Yusuf Buhari said.

  • BREAKING: Tinubu renames UniMaid after Buhari

    BREAKING: Tinubu renames UniMaid after Buhari

    President Bola Tinubu has renamed the University of Maiduguri (UniMaid) after the late former President Muhammadu Buhari.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports President Tinubu announced the renaming of UniMaid after Buhari at a special Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting held in honour of the former president in Abuja on Thursday.

    The university located in Borno State, hitherto known and called University of Maiduguri or UniMaid, will now be known as Muhammadu Buhari University (MBU), Maiduguri.

    Speaking during the special expanded FEC session, Tinubu praised Buhari’s legacy of discipline, patriotism, and moral uprightness, calling his life one of quiet courage and unwavering service to Nigeria.

    “Today, we gather under a heavy shadow, drawn from the silence that surrounds a departed leader and the immense weight of a ‎life whose absence will be felt for generations.

    “We meet to honour a man whose presence once commanded this very room, whose voice once summoned the best in us, and whose ‎convictions never bowed, even to the strongest winds of public opinion,” the president said.

    Tinubu described Buhari as a “patriot, soldier, and elder statesman” who dedicated his life to national unity and progress.

    “President Buhari’s life was one of austere honour. He stood, ‎always, ramrod straight; unmoved by the temptation of power, ‎unseduced by applause and unafraid of the loneliness that often visits those who do what is right, rather than what is popular.”

    ‎”His was a quiet courage, a righteousness that never announced itself. His patriotism was lived more in action than in words. His life traced the arc of Nigeria’s journey,” he said.

    ‎Tinubu reflected on Buhari’s military years, describing him as a gallant soldier who helped preserve Nigeria’s unity during critical times.

    He commended Buhari’s democratic legacy, noting how he placed trust in the people and led with restraint and integrity.

    “When he was sworn in as our party’s first elected President, he led with restraint, governed with dignity, and bore the burdens of leadership without complaint.

    The president said that those who knew him most intimately understood that the authority of that exalted office never changed him.

    According to Tinubu, in the face of pressure, he remained calm; in the face of crisis, he remained resolute and in the face of triumph, he remained modest.

    He urged Nigerians to uphold Buhari’s values: humility in power, discipline in service and compassion in governance.

    Tinubu thanked the Inter-Ministerial Committee, led by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) George Akume, and Gov Dikko Radda, for organising a befitting State Funeral within 48 hours.

    Meanwhile, ‎Senate President Godswill Akpabio at the special FEC meeting hailed Buhari as a principled leader who governed with honour and simplicity.

    “As a minister in his cabinet, appointed by him, I saw President Buhari unplugged. He was not flamboyant, far from it. His voice was measured. His steps, deliberate.

    “His public demeanor, austere. But beneath that calm exterior beat the heart of a patriot—unyielding, unbending, and utterly uninterested in personal comfort when duty called,” he said.

    ‎Speaker of the House of Representatives, Tajudeen Abass, described Buhari as a mentor, a moral compass, and a steady guide to the nation’s leaders.

    ‎In his response, Yusuf Buhari, son of the late President, thanked Tinubu and Nigerians for the support and a dignified burial for his father.

    ‎He expressed gratitude for the national solidarity and urged continued prayers for his father’s eternal rest.

    The session also had tributes from selected ministers who praised Buhari’s impact, character, and enduring leadership legacy.

  • How Tinubu directed me to visit Buhari on sickbed in London – Shettima

    How Tinubu directed me to visit Buhari on sickbed in London – Shettima

    Vice President Kashim Shettima has explained how President Bola Tinubu directed him to visit the late former President Muhammadu Buhari on his sickbed in London, United Kingdom.

    Shettima made this known on Wednesday after a brief prayer for the repose of the soul of Buhari, held at the deceased’s residence in Daura, Katsina State.

    He said Tinubu was personally pained by the loss of Buhari, adding that it was not a loss only to the family of Buhari, the people of Daura or the people of Katsina State but it was a major loss to the nation and to the African continent.

    According to him, people from far and wide have called to commiserate with  Tinubu over the sad demise of “our elders statesman.”

    He stated that every soul shall test the torment of the death, adding that death was an inevitable destiny that hangs on everyone’s neck.

    “We should all consider ourselves as travellers with our bag and baggage waiting for the train,” he said.

    Shettima prayed to Allah to grant the soul of Buhari eternal rest, reward him with Aljannah Firdaus and protect the family he left behind.

    He added, ” The president was personally pained by the loss. He sent me to London earlier on to go and visit the late President.

    “I was there for two days and when he answered the call of Allah, the president equally directed me and the Chief of Staff to go and accompany the family and the body of the late president back home.

    “And best on consultation with Tinubu,  the family of the late president Buhari and the Government of Katsina State, it was unanimously resolved that tomorrow (Thursday) by God grace, by noon, we shall all gather here to offer our prayers for the repose of the soul of the late president. “

    Shettima said that the late Buhari was not an ordinary person, adding that Nigerians from all walks of life were still free to come and offer their condolences to the Government and people of Katsina State.

    The vice-president disclosed that the Gov. Dikko Radda would be in the state for the next one week and also the members of the family of the late president would be in Daura to accept condolences.

    “But the formal ceremony will come to am end tomorrow based on consultation between Tinubu, the family of the late president and the Governor of Katsina state, ” Shettima said.

    Earlier,  Radda said the demise of Buhari was a great loss to the people of Katsina State, the nation and Africa in general.

    He urged leaders at all levels to sustain the legacies of the late Buhari by ensuring transparency, honesty and accountability in governance, adding, “Buhari lived and died for the people.”

    The governor appealed to all Nigerians to continue to pray for the repose of the soul of Buhari.

    Radda thanked Tinubu and Shettima for honouring the late former president and the people of Katsina state with their presence during Buhari’s burial.

    Also, the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Alhaji Mohammed Idris,  extolled the virtues of the late former Nigerian leader.

    “We are here to pray for the repose of the soul of our  former leader, president Muhammadu Buhari.

    “May Allah accept his soul. Yesterday (Tuesday) as we all know, the former president was buried here in his compound and it was witnessed by people from all walks of life including the President of Nigeria, President Tinubu.

    “Today, we have come to offer condolences and to also offer prayers for the repose of the soul of the former President, ” the minister said.

    On his part, the Minister of Labour and Employment, Alhaji Maigari Dingyadi,  said he worked closely with the late Buhari as a member of his cabinet.

    According to him, Buhari demonstrated high sense of leadership, integrity and sense of leadership qualities.

    “The late former president Buhari tried his best to fight corruption at all levels of government. He also tried his best to improve the quality of the Nigerian economy.

    “We thank Allah for providing us with a leader of that quality and we are here today praying for the repose of his soul. We pray to Allah to grant him Aljannah, ” Dingyadi prayed.

    Dignitaries present were: Alhaji Mamman Daura, Minister of Women Affairs, Imaan Suleiman-Ibrahim, Minister of Agriculture and Food Security, Sen. Abubakar Kyari, Minister of Environment, Alhaji Balarabe Abbas and the Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, Sen. Abubakar Bagudu.

    Others were the FCT Minister of State, Dr Mariya Mahmoud, the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation, Lateef Fagbemi, SAN, the Minister of Mines and Steel Development, Prince Shaibu Abubakar.

    Also present were: Mr Peter Obi, Amb. Babagana Kingibe, former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar, former Director-General, National Intelligence Agency (NIA), Amb. Rufai Ahmed, former Minister of Aviation, Sen. Hadi Sirika, and former Governor of Kaduna State, Malam Nasiru El-rufa’i,  among others.

  • Thousands gather to witness Buhari buried in Daura

    Thousands gather to witness Buhari buried in Daura

    The remains of former President Muhammadu Buhari have been buried at his residence in Daura, amidst tears and prayers by his immediate family members, President Bola Tinubu, Governors, Ministers and the masses, among other thousands of mourners.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports former President Buhari’s body was respectfully laid to rest at about 5:50 pm Nigerian time.

    The burial was also attended by Vice President Kashim Shettima, former Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, President of Guinea Bissau, Umaro Sissoco Embaló and the Prime Minister of Niger Republic, Ali Lamine Zeine.

    Others were: Service Chiefs, Captains of industry, former governors, representative of the President of Chad Republic, Islamic clerics, and other high profile personalities from within amd outside the country.

    As part of the final honours, a joint Military team rendered a 21-gun salute before the former president was interred at his private residence in Daura.

    Before his final interment, the Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Christopher Musa, who read Buhari’s citation, described his demise as a profound loss to the country and his immediate family.

    Musa said the late Buhari was a fine soldier, who exhibited high sense of professionalism, discipline,  honesty, integrity and selfless service to the country.

    Earlier on arrival in Daura, the body was received by a mammoth crowd, praising the name of Allah and seeking divine mercy for the former Nigerian leader.

    The  family members of the the late president were allowed to see his corpse for few minutes to offer fervent prayers for the repose of his soul.

    Buhari, a former Military Head of State from 1984 to 1985, returned to power through democratic elections in 2015 and was re-elected in 2019.

    His years in office were marked by anti-corruption campaigns, infrastructural reforms, and a mixed record on security and economic growth.

    Thousand dignitaries, well wishers in Daura for Buhari’s interment

    President Tinubu in company of President Umaro Sissoco Embaló of Guinea-Bissau and Niger Republic Prime Minister, Ali Lamine Zeine, were among thousands of people who attended the funeral rites of the late former President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday in Daura, Katsina State.

    The remains of Buhari were conveyed to Nigeria by the Vice President Kashim Shettima and the Chief of Staff to President Tinubu, Mr Femi Gbajabiamila.

    The remains were brought aboard a Nigerian Air force flight FGT 001, which touched ground at the Umaru Musa Yar’adua International Airport, around 2p.m., on Tuesday.

    The body was received by Tinubu, Gov Dikko Radda of Katsina State, National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, Governors and other dignitaries.

    After a farewell parade in honour of the late former Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, his remains were conveyed to Daura by road.

    The funeral prayer was led by Imam Hassan Yusuf, after 4p.m., at the Daura Helipad.

    The prayer was performed by many dignitaries, notable among them were the former Nigerien President Mahamadou Issoufou and former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar.

    Others were members of the National Assembly, Emir of Daura, Alhaji Umar Faruk-Umar, that of Katsina, Alhaji Abdulmumini Kabir-Usman and Emirs of Zazzau, Dutse and Kazaure, among others.

    Captains of industries like Alhaji Aliko Dangote and Alhaji Dahiru Barau Mangal, also attended the burial.

    After the funeral prayer, the corpse was taken to his personal residence where he was buried.

    The funeral rites were attended by thousands of people who were earlier denied access to the venue but later allowed to enter.

    Some of the people interviewed upheld the virtues of the late former President who distinguished himself for integrity, honesty and discipline.

    Salisu Lawal, said that Buhari was a great man who loved staying with his people and offer a helping hand to them.

    Aliyu Nasiru, another resident, described the death of Buhari as a great loss only to his immediate family, but to enter state and the country.

    “The death has created a vacuum that is difficult to fill, he will continue to be remembered for his good virtues,” he said.

    He prayed to the Almighty Allah to forgive his shortcomings, grant him Al-Jannah Firdaus.

    The thousands of well-wishers also included former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, Emirs of Zazzau, Kazaure, Dutse and the 19th Emir of Kano.

    Other dignitaries at the residents of the late former president are, the Governor of Bauchi, Alhaji Bala Mohammed, former Governors of Kaduna, Malam Nasir El-Rufai Sokoto, Aminu Tambuwal.

    Others are the former Governors of Kogi, Yahaya Bello; Borno, Alimodu Sherif; Ekiti, Kayode Fayemi; Katsina, Aminu Masari, Kebbi, Adamu Aliero.

    Others include former minister of Aviation, Hadi Sirika, former governor of Kebbi, Adamu Aleru, former IG of Police Adamu, Amb. Babagana Kigebe.

    Other thousands of well-wishers gathered at the venue to bid the former president farewell, where the funeral prayer will take place in Daura.

  • Buhari’s death: Archbishop Martins calls for improved healthcare delivery

    Buhari’s death: Archbishop Martins calls for improved healthcare delivery

    The Catholic Archbishop of Lagos, Most Rev. Alfred Adewale Martins, has called for an improved healthcare delivery system to cater for the people instead of health tourism that many Nigerians embark on.

    Adewale Martins, made the call on Tuesday in a condolence message he signed to sympathise with Nigerians over the demise of the former President, Muhammadu Buhari in a London hospital.

    The message was made available to newsmen in Lagos.

    He decried the lack of adequate medical facilities in the country, saying such had posed threat to many and claimed lives as many could not avoid to travel abroad such as the leaders to seek medical care.

    According to him, the Church commiserates with the entire family of the late former President Muhammadu Buhari and all others who mourn as he is buried today, July 15.

    “May God grant him eternal rest and consolation to all who are saddened by his death.

    “His death in a London hospital brings into focus again, the need to develop healthcare delivery and facilities in our country to stem the tide of medical tourism.

    “This anomaly does not only drain the purses of those who can afford it, but more importantly, it also deepens the pain of those who cannot afford medical treatment overseas.

    “They are left with the feeling that they are being left to die even from the most easily treatable illnesses.

    “If the former First Lady can lament at the poor state of the State House clinic during their tenure, one can only imagine the state of clinics and hospitals meant for the common man.

    “It is indeed a shame that the death of President Buhari makes it the second time that the President of our country would die in hospitals overseas.

    “The death of Buhari should ginger our governments to wake up to the need for doing something strategic to improve the healthcare delivery.

    “His death is also a wake-up call to find ways of dealing with the issues that lead to the brain drain that has impacted the health sector very badly and continues to impoverish healthcare delivery in the country,” he said.

    He regretted that nearly every health care professional was waiting for an opportunity to leave the country (Japa) and use their expertise to care for people of other countries.

    “Ironically, many times, it is the same medical professionals that should be taking care of us in the country that people meet in hospitals that they go to abroad,” the cleric added.

    The archbishop prayed that the death of Buhari be the catalyst for bringing about the necessary improvement of the state of healthcare delivery in the country.

  • TRIBUTE: Muhammadu Buhari, the man I knew – By General Irabor

    TRIBUTE: Muhammadu Buhari, the man I knew – By General Irabor

    By General Lucky E. O. Irabor

    The news of the passing of President Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR, came to me and my family as a profound shock and source of deep sorrow. I know that we are not alone in this grief – millions of Nigerians at home and in the diaspora feel the same sense of loss.

    President Buhari was, in every sense, a good man. Before he appointed me as Chief of Defence Staff on 26 January 2021, I had never met him personally. Like many Nigerians, I knew him only from a distance-through the pages of history, the news, and the reverence with which he was spoken of in military circles.

    As an Officer Cadet in the Nigerian Defence Academy during his tenure as Military Head of State, I admired him from afar. It was only after my appointment as Chief of Defence Staff that I got to truly know the man behind the public image.

    In our very first meeting, he looked me in the eye and said, “I have never met you before, but I have heard of your performance. I hope you will not disappoint.” That moment has never left me

    In President Buhari, I encountered a disciplined and deeply principled leader. A soldier’s soldier. A man who said little but listened intently and deeply. He placed implicit trust in those he appointed-never micromanaging, never second-guessing.

    It was, perhaps, this quiet trust that some may have misunderstood or even taken for granted. But to me, it revealed a depth of character and a rare kind of leadership.

    As Commander-in-Chief, he gave unwavering support to the Armed Forces under my watch, within the limits of the nation’s resources. He trusted our judgment and believed in our capacity as I assured him that we would never make excuses. He believed in us that failure was not an end it was a lesson to be learned, a stepping stone to future success.

    President Buhari was firm, yet fair. He had the humility to yield to superior arguments when convinced by reason, especially on matters of national security.

    I recall two distinct occasions when I respectfully asked him to reconsider directives relayed through his staff.  After hearing my perspective, he promptly reversed those decisions-without ego, without hesitation.

    On another occasion, I drew his attention to the grave national security risks of what was then perceived as governmental passivity on a matter of urgent concern. He responded with remarkable speed and poise. That moment defined, for me, the essence of true leadership.

    At National Security Council meetings, I was often struck by his endurance-sitting for hours, attentive and composed, never once calling for a break. I once asked him, half in jest, how he found the patience and strength. He only smiled.

    Yes, like every mortal, he had his flaws. But within the man I knew-President Muhammadu Buhari-I saw a patriot who loved Nigeria deeply and gave of himself sacrificially. He desired a better nation and poured out his energy, time, and strength in pursuit of that dream.

    I am profoundly grateful for the opportunity to have served in his administration, to have walked a part of this journey of nation-building with him.

    On behalf of my family, I extend our heartfelt condolences to the former First Lady, Dr. Aisha Buhari, the entire family, friends, and all who mourn this national loss. May you find comfort in the knowledge that your husband, father, and friend served with dignity, honour, and integrity.

    To my Commander-in-Chief, my Principal – President Muhammadu Buhari, at the sound of the Last Post, rest well. You fought the good fight. May your soul find eternal peace in the bosom of the Almighty.

    General Lucky E. O. Irabor (Rtd), CFR, immediate past Chief of Defence Staff, Nigeria

  • BREAKING: Buhari finally laid to rest in Daura

    BREAKING: Buhari finally laid to rest in Daura

    The immediate past President of Nigeria, Muhammadu Buhari, has finally been buried at his hometown in Daura, Katsina State.

    TheNewsGuru reports that the former President was buried on Tuesday evening after a funeral prayer (Jana’iza) was held for him in his country home, Daura.

    Buhari’s burial was attended by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu; his wife, Remi Tinubu; Vice President Kashim Shettima; immediate-past Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and many other top dignitaries.

    Family members and relatives were also present to pay their last respects to the former Nigerian leader before his burial.

    Recall that Buhari, who served as Nigeria’s democratically elected President from 2015 to 2023 and also served as Military Head of State between January 1984 and August 1985, died in London on Sunday, at the age of 82, after a prolonged illness.

  • Buhari offered me a rare friendship – Ex Gov Obiano

    Buhari offered me a rare friendship – Ex Gov Obiano

    Former Governor of Anambra, Chief Willie Obiano, has described the death of Nigeria immediate past President, Muhammadu Buhari, as “very painful” considering his healthy relationship with him.

    Obiano said that the news was unexpected to him and said that the death which occurred  on Sunday, July 13,  in a London hospital  was a “black day” for him and his family.

    The former governor released his tribute to journalists in Awka on Tuesday through his former aide, Chief Paul Nwosu ,former commissioner for  information in Anambra.

    Obiano described the late President as a disciplined and principled leader who confronted corruption with uncommon resolve and served Nigeria with sincerity and simplicity.

    He noted that history would remember the former president as a man who governed with deep conviction and stood firm on issues he believed in.

    Obiano praised the late President for his fairness and respect for democratic processes, especially during his tenure.

    “Unlike what was often the case in the past, President Buhari ensured that Anambra votes truly counted during elections under his watch.

    “He firmly resisted alleged attempts to undermine the democratic space in the state and stood by democratic ideals and upheld the sanctity of his mandate.”he remarked.

    Obiano noted that there were fond memories of the personal relationship he enjoyed with the late President, describing him as a leader who rose above partisanship.

    “Despite our political differences, he offered me a rare friendship. He welcomed me warmly into his inner circle, included me on presidential delegations abroad, and granted me unfettered access to his office.

    “His openness and magnanimity defined him as a man of repute ,” he recalled.

    Obiano concluded by saying that the death of President Buhari marked the end of an era in Nigerian politics.

    He prayed for the peaceful repose of his soul and for God to console his family, the people of Daura, and the entire nation.

    “President Muhammadu Buhari will be greatly missed. May his soul find eternal rest,” he prayed.

    Buhari: Saudi King commiserates with Nigeria

    Meanwhile, King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud of Saudi Arabia has extended heartfelt condolences to President Bola Tinubu and the people of Nigeria on the passing of former President Muhammadu Buhari.

    ‎The Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, in a statement, mourned the loss of the elder statesman, expressing sympathy to President Tinubu, the Nigerian people, and Buhari’s family.

    ‎Crown Prince Mohammed bin Abdulaziz Al Saud also sent a message of condolence to Nigeria.

    ‎The Crown Prince expressed sadness over Buhari’s passing and prayed for his soul’s peaceful rest in Aljannah Firdaus.

    ‎Buhari, 82, died on Sunday at a London hospital after a prolonged illness. ‎He will be buried on Tuesday in his hometown, Daura, Katsina State.

    ‎The Federal Government had declared Tuesday a public holiday and ordered flags to fly at half-mast nationwide in honour of the late former Nigerian president.

  • Buhari’s body arrives in Daura for burial

    Buhari’s body arrives in Daura for burial

    The body of former President Muhammadu Buhari has arrived in Daura, Katsina State, for burial.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the body of Buhari was transported from Umaru Musa Yar’adua Airport, Katsina in a motorcade to Daura, his home town for interment

    The body was accompanied to Daura by President Bola Tinubu, Service Chiefs, serving and former governors, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Captains of Industries, Ministers, among others.

    The motorcade with a hearse conveying the body of Buhari departed the Katsina Airport for Daura, a distance of about 88.6km, at about 3.15p.m.

    It was observed that,  while the body was moving out of Katsina, the people of the city turnout in their large number to pay last respect to the former President.

    Buhari was described by analyst as one of the most adored politicians in the recent political history of Nigeria. He passed away in London clinic, on Sunday at the age of 82.

    The aircraft conveying Buhari’s body from London, accompanied by the Vice-President Kashim Shettima and the Chief of Staff to the President, Femi Gbajabiamila, touched the ground at 1:50p.m. at Umaru Musa Yar’adua Airport, Katsina.

    Upon arrival, the body was received by President Bola Tinubu who had earlier arrived the Katsina Airport.

    There was a brief military ceremony held at the airport before the bearer party conveyed the body of the former president into the waiting hearse.