Tag: Muhammadu Buhari

  • Tinubu pays tribute to Buhari for adopting June 12 Democracy Day

    Tinubu pays tribute to Buhari for adopting June 12 Democracy Day

    President Bola Tinubu has paid tribute to former president Muhammadu Buhari, for making June 12,  Nigeria’s  Democracy Day and officially acknowledging Chief MKO Abiola as duly elected president of Nigeria after the June 12 1993 presidential election.

    Tinubu paid the tribute to Buhari in his address on Thursday at the Joint Session of the National Assembly in commemoration  of Nigeria’s 2025 democracy day.

    The President also paid tribute to other heroes of democracy saying: “Whilst Abiola was the  June 12’s central figure, Nigerians must not forget the long list of those who equally deserved to be called heroes of Nigerian democracy.

    “We must celebrate the courage of Alhaja Kudirat Abiola and Pa Alfred Rewane, both of whom were murdered by agents of military repression.

    “We also remember the many civil rights activists, journalists, and politicians imprisoned, exiled, tossed aside, tortured and beaten by the military regime.”

    Tinubu also honoured late Chief Anthony Enahoro, Commodore Dan Suleiman, Chief Abraham Adesanya, Ayo Adebanjo, Chief Gani Fawehinmi, Balarabe Musa, Ganiyu Dawodu, Bagauda Kaltho, and Commodore Ndubuisi Kanu.

    “I mention these names not to exclude or degrade the profound contributions of anyone else but to illustrate, through these few heroes, the universality of our pursuit of democracy.

    “The struggle was never the province of any one group or section of the country, it was pan-Nigerian in its conception and will be even more  as we strive to perfect it,” the President stated.

  • What ex-President Buhari said about late ex-CJN Uwais

    What ex-President Buhari said about late ex-CJN Uwais

    Former President Muhammadu Buhari has condoled with Nigerians following the passing away of former Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Mohammed Uwais.

    The former president said he was pained by the passing of the late CJN, “who had a distinguished career as a lawyer and a judge.”

    A statement issued on Friday in Abuja by his spokesman, Garba Shehu, quoted Buhari as saying that Uwais made notable contributions in bringing justice closer to the people.

    “He was admired for his compassion and justice. He made important contributions toward making Nigeria‘s democratic fabric stronger.

    “He will always be remembered by countless people for his emphasis on a meticulous approach to law as a judge and a member of the Council of States.

    “I extend by heartfelt condolences to his family members, relatives, and friends who are grieving his loss as we all are,” he said.

    Uwais served as chief justice of Nigeria and as chairman of the Electoral Reforms Committee. His involvement in the Nigerian judicial system began in the 1960s.

    He held various positions within the judicial system before becoming chief justice, such as state counsel and senior state counsel.

    He worked in the Court of Appeal for 16 years. He studied at the Institute of Administration, Ahmadu Bello University, and the University of London and Inn of Court, School of Law.

  • Buhari mourns Niger flood victims, Kano athletes’ death

    Buhari mourns Niger flood victims, Kano athletes’ death

    Former President Muhammadu Buhari has condoled with the victims of the Niger flood and the Kano athletes that died in an auto accident.

    This followed the death of more than one hundred persons in flash floods that destroyed homes and displaced thousands of residents last week in Niger.

    The death was also recorded of 22 young athletes, coaches, and officials in a ghastly auto crash in Kano state after the Ogun games in Abeokuta.

    Buhari, in a statement by his spokesman, Garba Shehu, sympathised with the bereaved families, governments and the people of Niger and Kano states over the incident.

    The former president said that the tragic incidents, happening in a quick sequence had left him shocked and devastated as it did many people in different parts of the world.

    “I am deeply pained  by the loss of lives due to the floods in Niger state and the road accident in Kano state.

    “The deaths are painful and devastating. Condolences to the families and friends of all those who have lost their loved ones. May the injured recover soon.”

  • Buhari jets out to UK for medical check-up

    Buhari jets out to UK for medical check-up

    Former president Muhammadu Buhari has disclosed his inability to attend the 50th anniversary of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) held in Lagos on Wednesday was  due to a medical check-up in the UK.

    In a letter addressed to President Bola Tinubu, Buhari congratulated the regional bloc on the occasion of its 50th anniversary, while expressing regret over his inability to attend the historic celebration.

    “Regrettably, as Your Excellency is aware, I am currently in the United Kingdom undergoing routine medical check-ups and therefore, unable to attend this historic event,” Buhari wrote.

    He lauded the achievements of ECOWAS over the past five decades, acknowledging the regional body’s resilience in the face of daunting challenges.

    “I congratulate Your Excellency and other Heads of State and Government on the attainment of this Golden Jubilee by ECOWAS,” he stated.

    Buhari also paid tribute to retired Gen. Yakubu Gowon, Nigeria’s former Head of State, the only surviving founding father of ECOWAS, commending his pivotal role in the creation of the regional bloc in 1975.

    Recall that the anniversary celebration marked a milestone for ECOWAS, which was formally inaugurated in Lagos in 1975.

    A symbolic reenactment of the original declaration was held at the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs (NIIA), in Victoria Island, Lagos.

  • 2nd year journey: Ex-President Buhari backs Tinubu’s reforms

    2nd year journey: Ex-President Buhari backs Tinubu’s reforms

    Former President Muhammadu Buhari has congratulated his successor, President Bola Tinubu, on his midterm, calling for Nigerians’ continue support for his administration’s efforts to address poverty and inflation.

    This is contained in a statement issued by Buhari’s former Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, on Wednesday.

    Buhari also called for steadfast support for the All Progressives Congress-led government as it marks its second year in office, saying reforms would achieve success gradually, not overnight.

    He warned that necessary reforms and desired changes must not fall victim to mettlesome domestic politics.

    According to him, as the party and the government celebrate, the country should be reminded that leadership is a continuous journey.

    Buhari expressed support for the ongoing efforts by the Tinubu-led administration to curb poverty and inflation, which, he said, had hit the poorest families.

    Seeking Nigerians’ support for Tinubu-led administration, he said that the task of reducing poverty and inflation mustn’t be left only for the government.

    “The private sector and all of us, as citizens, must join in all ways we can,” he said.

    The former president urged Nigerians to remain optimistic and stay confident about the country’s future, saying ‘our expectations from our governments should not get heavy’.

    While expressing his heartfelt felitation to Tinubu on his two years in office, Buhari prayed God to keep and grant him the wisdom and care to continue to lead the country.

  • Let’s do apology letter to Buhari – By Abraham Ogbodo

    Let’s do apology letter to Buhari – By Abraham Ogbodo

    By Abraham Ogbodo

    We had accused President Muhammadu Buhari very wrongly. Without clear cut facts and evidence, we said he had an agenda to Fulanise Nigeria. Or let me put it that the facts and evidence against him were not tested to establish their admissibility. We just felt that putting only Fulanis or Fulani affiliated persons at the head of almost all the nation’s security agencies was in furtherance of an agenda. That is, an agenda to reopen the truncated Uthman Da Fodio Jihad and have it concluded by bringing the entire territory of Nigeria; from the Sahael to the coastlines under Fulani conquest and domination. It would be such that my Urhobo land with 24 kingdoms and kings would be collapsed into an emirate with one imperial emir that reported to the Sultan in Sokoto, in charge.

    Same way, Benin, Warri, Asaba and Agbor, for instance, would dissolve into emirates and instead of Oba, Olu, Asagba and Obi respectively, sitting on the thrones of their forebears in these kingdoms, it would be emirs and Alhaji this and that. The beautiful kingdoms in the Southwest parading varied kingship titles would be lumped into a uniform description. The time-honoured title of the Alafin of Oyo would change to Emir of Oyo and the immutable Ooni of Ife would follow suit. It was a most dangerous prospect and part of the anti-Buhari campaign back then, was to stop this from happening.

    That was the charge. In Nigeria, there is a big group called the Hausa-Fulani. This is just for purposes of ethnic identification. It is even much larger than that conceptually and geographically. Other Nigerians see all Hausa speaking areas of Northern Nigeria as being bound by a common interest. That interest is to dominate the polity and the political economy. The fact that, beyond the Niger/ Benue confluence to the far North, there are hundreds of ethnic nationalities and the core group called Fulani, are less than eight million human beings, does not affect the perception. Every group, from the Plateau and Benue through Adamawa, Borno, Gombe and back to Taraba, Nasarawa and Niger, including even Kogi and Kwara, is equally yoked. It is only now that the rich are also crying everywhere in the North that people are beginning to see the difference between the Fulani man, the Hausa man and other men in the vast North. It looks like while some are herders others are farmers.

    Meanwhile, here are some of the supporting facts and pieces of evidence to reasonably allege that President Buhari was on a continuation of the Sokoto Jihad that started in 1804 and ended in 1808. Under him, the heads of the Army and Air force were Hausa-Fulani. So were the heads of the police and secret police otherwise known as the Department of State Security (DSS). Other strategic areas of state operations like the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFFC) which has morphed over the years from an anti-corruption agency to an attack dog in the hands of the central government, the Customs and Excise Department, Immigration and Civil Defence were headed by Hausa-Fulani.

    It is the way of governance in Nigeria and nobody was particularly disturbed by it. It is usually a turn by turn arrangement in which the incumbent plundered the common wealth and reworked existing state structures to give advantage to his group. People only got agitated when a correlation somehow evolved between how herders operated unchallenged; killing and maiming farmers and others across the land, and the reality of the national security architecture under Buhari. No arrest, prosecution and conviction of killer herdsmen were ever recorded. Instead, it was one Sunday Igboho who saw how his people in Oyo were being killed by herdsmen and rose stoutly in defence that was branded a criminal that must be liquidated at all costs by combined federal forces. Even when the defender backed off and left his people to be slaughtered by armed herdsmen, he did not have respite. He was traced, tracked and fixed in Republic of Benin.

    There was also Nnamdi Kanu in the Southeast who sought and still seeking clarifications on the many aspects of the Nigerian Federation. The man has not known peace since he started asking too many forbidden questions. Questions like, why his Ibo people have not been fully integrated into the Nigerian system more than 55 years after the end of the civil? Kanu and Igboho basis the same question, but in different ways. However, while Igboho, since the advent of Tinubu, has been repositioned to ask more questions, Kanu is in the gulag and still searching for explanations for his ordeal. He has been in detention since 2021 when he was forcefully abducted from Kenya into Nigeria. People are saying his only offence is that he is an Ibo man. It is like asking him why he chose to be born into Nigeria as an Ibo instead of an ethnic identity that offers better advantages and privileges.

    But that is not why we here today. We are here to reiterate that when President Mohammadu Buhari left on May 29, 2023, there was some joy in the land. The relief that, the alleged Uthman Dan Fodio incarnate, bent on reopening and finishing the truncated Islamist agenda of 1804, was gone for good. A new Pharaoh who did not know Yusuf and his people had entered and the herders’ carnage would soon stop. This is more than 22 months after Buhari’s exit and nothing has even abated not to talk of stopping. The killings have heightened and it has become imperative to search for other reasons, outside Buhari, to explain the current situation. From Zamfara, Sokoto, Kebbi, Katsina through Borno, Yobe, Adamawa, Benue,Plateau, Kogi to Ekiti, Ondo, Edo and Delta, it has been an unbroken story of bloodletting. People are killed without qualms as if human life has become mosquito life in Nigeria.

    Not even in the jungle does that degree of mindless killing take place. If it does, both prey and predator will be endangered. The lion kills when it is hungry. It does not kill for sports or for keeps. In Nigeria, we are killing for the fun of it. We kill for sports, the same way the Nazis dispatched millions of Jews in a Final Solution scheme. Bandits and terrorists would storm a sleeping community and in the ensuing melee, they would aim at fleeing residents and take them out like game. And nothing happens thereafter. One estimate puts the deaths at about 200,000 since terrorism, banditry and kidnapping gained notoriety in Nigeria.

    It has become so bad that Buhari himself is endangered in Daura, Katsina State. He now lives more in Kaduna. He is helpless in the face of an un-abating existential onslaught. Yet when he held together all the variables, we had attributed the situation to his unwillingness to combine the right factors to achieve definite results.  I can now understand why the sages say history is the best judge. The true judgement has come out after only two years of history. If we had insisted on stoning Buhari to death for supporting the Jihadists invasion of Nigerian territories, we would have killed an innocent man. Now, the security architecture has been redesigned with a new localisation of the power points. The new Commander-In-Chief is not a Fulani Champion. The Service Chiefs and other security heads are fairly localised within a geo-ethnic zone. Why haven’t the killings stopped?

    This is why I am suggesting that a delegation should be sent to Daura or wherever Buhari is, to say sorry to him on behalf of all of us. That we had accused him wrongly for encouraging murderous Fulani herders to take over our land. It was not Buhari that failed after all. It was the Nigerian system that failed. Nothing appears to add up for good. The big defence budgets for years have not added up to an operationally efficient military that can combat effectively the problem at hand. Policing at all levels has become official extortion and any cross-border criminal who is fairly open-handed at the borders can move in and out of Nigeria with the same ease that President Tinubu jets in and out of France on official and working visits to review his two years performance as the President and Commander-In-Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    Seriously, it is like something requires to be exorcised from the Nigerian system for things to work properly. Buhari did not know how to perform this surgery. For eight years, his media aides sustained the lie about his competence to carry out a successful surgery without endangering the life of the patient. President Tinubu has also been beating about the bush while killers roam the real bushes to kill citizens. Like Emperor Nero, Tinubu looks for whom to blame for the fire in Nigeria. He has detailed some aides to look for those to blame when there is fire. That is what Bayo Onanuga and others in his communication team do for him. When there is no ready scapegoat to carry the cross, his handlers would speak grammar to a situation that requires action. They think rationalisation is specific performance.

    On the body part of Nigeria that needs to be cut off for happiness to endure in the land, a suggestion has been made. Some people have said the cancerous tissue troubling the anatomy is the leadership. Settle this and the body-polity will become healthy forever.

  • Former Nigerian president, Buhari relocates from Daura

    Former Nigerian president, Buhari relocates from Daura

    Former Nigerian leader, Muhammadu Buhari has relocated to his residence in Kaduna, two years after settling in Daura, Katsina State, following the completion of his tenure.

    TheNewsGuru reports that former presidential aide, Bashir Ahmad, made this known via his X page on Thursday night.

    Ahmad noted that the ex- Nigerian leader had decided to settle in Daura after leaving office in May 2023, to stay away from active political discussions and focusing on private engagements.

    “Today, former President Muhammadu Buhari has returned to his Kaduna residence after spending two years in Daura, Katsina State, since leaving office in May 2023.

    “After completing his tenure, he opted for a quiet life in his hometown and largely stayed out of active political discussions, focusing on private engagements,” Ahmad wrote.

    The former president was joined by Vice-President Kashim Shettima, Borno State Governor Babagana Zulum, and Kaduna State Governor Uba Sani, along with other dignitaries, indicating strong support from key political allies.

  • Judiciary: Onnoghen and Buhari’s leprous legacy – By Pius Mordi

    Judiciary: Onnoghen and Buhari’s leprous legacy – By Pius Mordi

    When Muhammadu Buhari capped his onslaught on the judiciary with his unilateral removal of then Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) Walter Onnoghen, his political allies allowed politics to becloud their sense of respect for the constitution and separation of powers.

    Buhari tested the waters when under the guise of fighting corruption in the judiciary, he orchestrated series of invasions of the homes and privacy of the homes of judges, especially in the unholy hours of the night.

    It was a successful test that was aided and abetted by a hypothetical mantra that change had come from the one dubiously called ‘mai gaskiya’.

    When he moved for the final kill by going for the head of a co-equal branch of government, all the checks and institutional hurdles had been effectively breached and compromised. The removal of Walter Onnoghen was an episode that presented the opportunity to reform the National Judicial Council (NJC) and give it a measure of independence. As the CJN is the chairman of the NJC, the moment the substantive Onnoghen was removed and Ibrahim Tanko Mohammad, the direct beneficiary of Buhari’s adventure was enthroned, the NJC also lost its voice. How could Ibrahim Tanko Mohammad truncate his unearned privilege by letting any group advocate that NJC should ask for adherence to the rule of law in the face of vicious attacks from the former president? The body was now in an identity crisis.

    Buhari’s ignominious playbook has now come in handy for the Benue State government and the House of Assembly as they seek to remove the state chief judge, Justice Maurice Ikpambese. The charges against him are as murky as amorphous as the allegations of corruption Buhari levelled against Onnoghen. Abuse of office, misappropriation and mismanagement of the budgetary allocation and finances of the state judiciary, engagement with politicians and political office holders for favourable judicial outcomes, and indirect participation and incitement of industrial actions against the state executive were the principal allegations against the Chief Justice.

    The main factor was the array of stakeholders and forces aligned against him. The Benue State House of Assembly, Benue All Progressive Congress (APC) Elders’ Forum and the executive branch were all in the collaborative effort to oust Ikpambese. The state branch of the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) and the NJC lead the alliance of stakeholders seeking to save the Chief Justice’s job alongside the Benue caucus of members of the National Assembly.

    Having already dubbed the suspension of Ikpambese a scam, illegal and unconstitutional the NJC has taken a stance it is condemned to see through.

    The statement attributed to Sen. Barnabas Gemade, leader of the Benue APC Elders Forum, that the removal of Ikpambese was legal has aptly shown that the embattled chief justice is dealing with politics and his perceived infractions by politicians. That the state NBA has with agreed NJC that procedural steps have been circumvented by the state’s lawmakers underscore the fact Ikpambese’s travail is all about politics.

    With an old war horse like Sen. Gemade embedded on the scheme to nail the embattled chief justice, his fate seems sealed.

    But politicians cannot be left to ride roughshod over the judiciary the way lawmakers have become lapdogs of the executive branch. The Ikpambese case is one of the ignoble legacies of Buhari that must not be allowed to fester. The incomprehensible use of technical term by the CJ’s traducers.

    Defending route taken to remove the Chief Justice without recourse to the NJC or giving the chief legal office a hearing, the Benue State lawmakers argued that “the House did not recommend the removal of CJ as a judicial officer but as the CJ of Benue as provided by the law.

    “The House did not originate any petition against the CJ, therefore, it has no business with the NJC because the law only empowered them to act on the address of the governor, which they did,’’ he said.

    Ominously, however, that the 13 members who dissociated themselves from the decision were summarily suspended is a reckless abuse of power, the charge the House levelled against the Chief Justice. What is going on in Benue that was under the PDP in the previous administration but still under repeated deadly attacks from gunmen even after the ruling party took over does not bode well for respect for rule of law.

    It is a leprous legacy from the Buhari years that will haunt the judiciary. It is up to the NJC and other stakeholders to gird their loins and see through the constitutional reforms geared towards giving true independence to the judicial arm of government.

    Postscript

    Thank you, Canada

    In 2014, Prince Harry, son of late Princess Diana and Duke of Sussex, organised the first ever Invictus Games in London. It is an international sporting event for wounded, injured, and sick military personnel.

    The word invictus comes from the Latin and means “unconquered” or “undefeated”. It embodies the fighting spirit of the participating men and women, as well as their motivation to move on with their lives, to gain a new place in life, and to not let themselves be defined by the trauma they have suffered.

    After the inaugural edition in London, the multi-sport games have held in five other cities and in 2025 returned to Canada in Vancouver, having been held in Toronto in 2017.

    Nigeria’s wounded personnel were the only ones invited from Africa. Unfortunately, what dominated the news was the denial of visa to Defence chief, Christopher Musa and his entourage. National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu, was beside himself with dubious rage that Canada denied entry to Musa. Go to hell, the NSA told Canada.

    The Minister of Interior, Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, was no less indignant, describing the action as “disrespectful”.

    In the jostle show that a big man had been disrespected, it is lost on them that most of the athletes got their visa and the country proud at the games.

    What mattered was that the Chief of Defence Staff could not go to Vancouver to “provide a significant morale boost for the troops” as the Defence spokesman put.

    In this period when saving scarce foreign currency was imperative, the visa denial denial saved some money…and the athletes excelled. That’s what mattered.

    Thank you, Canada.

  • He was draconian – IBB reveals why Buhari government was overthrown

    He was draconian – IBB reveals why Buhari government was overthrown

    Former military president Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida (IBB) has revealed that he overthrew Muhammadu Buhari’s regime due to its detrimental policies affecting the nation’s progress.

    IBB made this known in his autobiography, ‘A Journey In Service’, launched in Abuja on Thursday, where he opened up that, he was chief of staff to Buhari, who ousted Shehu Shagari’s civilian government in the December 31, 1983 coup.

    After the military coup that replaced the civilian government of Shehu Shagari with a military regime led by Major General Muhammadu Buhari, Ibrahim Babangida assumed the Chief of Army Staff role.

    The former military head stated that he became increasingly dissatisfied with the policies and leadership style of the Buhari government, which he described as draconian.

    Babangida, while recalling how he journeyed from Minna to Lagos on August 27, 1985, to assume office, said tension had already begun to build up since the start of the year, and a change in leadership had become necessary.

    He said, “On that day, it became my lot to step into the saddle of national leadership on behalf of the Nigerian armed forces. The change in leadership had become necessary as a response to the worsening mood of the nation and growing concern about our future as a people. All through the previous day, as we flew from Minna and drove through Lagos towards Bonny Camp, I was deeply reflecting on how we as a nation got to this point and how and why I found myself at this juncture of fate.

    “By the beginning of 1985, the citizenry had become apprehensive about the future of our country. The atmosphere was precarious and fraught with ominous signs of clear and present danger. It was clear to the more discerning leadership of the armed forces that our initial rescue mission of 1983 had largely miscarried. We now stood the risk of having the armed forces split down the line because our rescue mission had largely derailed. If the armed forces imploded, the nation would go with it, and the end was just too frightening to contemplate.

    “Divisions of opinion within the armed forces had come to replace the unanimity of purpose that informed the December 1983 change of government. In state affairs, the armed forces, as the only remaining institution of national cohesion, were becoming torn into factions; something needed to be done lest we lose the nation itself. My greatest fear was that division of opinion and views within the armed forces could lead to factionalisation in the military. If allowed to continue and gain root, grave dangers lay ahead.”

  • I rented one of my house to feed – Buhari opens up on life after presidency

    I rented one of my house to feed – Buhari opens up on life after presidency

    Former Nigerian leader, Muhammadu Buhari, has disclosed that he makes money from renting one of his houses in Kaduna.

    The former president made this known while addressing the All Progressives Congress (APC) caucus meeting held at the Presidential Banquet Hall of the Government House, Katsina State, on Saturday.

    Buhari also claimed that he didn’t corrupt himself or enrich himself with public funds during his time in office.

    According to him, it is important for political and public officeholders to be accountable and transparent.

    “After my eight years as a civil president, I have only three houses; one in Daura and two in Kaduna. I have given one out for renting where I get money for feeding,” he stated.