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Femi Adesina tells Buhari’s haters to ‘repent in ashes and sackcloth’

Femi Adesina to Buhari “haters”, repent in ashes and sackcloth

Femi Adesina, Special Adviser to President Muhammadu Buhari on Media and Publicity, has a word for the “haters” of the President — “repent in ashes and sackcloth”.

Writing in an opinion on Saturday, Adesina said that “in spite of what haters, wailers, and filthy dreamers imagine, and which they spew out”, over President Buhari’s ill-health, “God remains merciful and immutable. He has the final say”.

He maintained that despite the falsehood and outright lies being peddled about by some politicians and others concerning the President’s health, the President he saw had significantly recovered.

He said: “As we strode into the living room, I saw with infinite pleasure, the great object of my mission. Standing tall and ramrod straight was President Muhammadu Buhari, with that ubiquitous smile in place.

“He was looking a lot better than he had ever looked in the past eight months. My heart leapt for joy, and sang praises to God.

“Was this not the man they said was on life-support machine? Didn’t they say he could neither walk nor talk? But he was welcoming Alhaji Lai Muhammed, and calling him by name. I was next. I shook the hands of the man I had admired since his days as a military Head-of-State, a man I am not ashamed to call my leader and President today, and any day.”

“The President had words for each member of the team, which showed that he had been following events back home very keenly. He commended the Minister of Information and Culture, saying, ‘Lai, you are all over the place. I see you virtually every day. You have been working very hard.'”

“Pointing to Abike Dabiri-Erewa, he said, ‘She is here in her constituency. But me, I am here reluctantly’. We all laughed, and Dabiri-Erewa jocularly issued what you could call a quit notice, saying she didn’t want the President in her constituency again.”

Adesina repeated how Buhari told them that he was okay now and felt he could return home but that the doctors were in charge. “I’ve learnt to obey orders, rather than be the one giving the orders,”Adesina quoted Buhari as having said.

“If you have met the President personally, he is usually full of wisecracks, and this day was not different,” Adesina wrote.

“He said he had been watching the protests by people who wanted him to return home post-haste, or resign. He mentioned one of the leaders of the protest by name, and laughed. I did not discern any malice in the laughter.”

Adesina noted that Aisha Buhari, wife of the President, Halima his daughter, and Yusuf his son were present when the team were treated to a nice meal at the dining.

“It was a setting which a man blinded by bile, and suffused with hatred, had described as a previous fast breaking session at Aso Villa during a Ramadan season. Father, forgive him, for he knows not what he says. We ate, heartily. Our appetites had been stimulated by the state in which we met our principal,” he said.

“The health status of our President … was a testimony to the healing powers of God. This was a man gravely ill, but restored miraculously. It can only be God.

“In spite of what haters, wailers, and filthy dreamers imagine, and which they spew out, God remains merciful and immutable. He has the final say. If I were a hater, I would repent now, in sackcloth and ashes.

“Yes, I’ve been to London to see the King. The Lion King. But unlike the pussycat in the nursery rhyme, I didn’t frighten any mouse under the chair.”

I’ve been to London to see the King

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I’ve been to London to see the King

BY FEMI ADESINA

Not a few tongues had wagged over the fact that President Muhammadu Buhari was outside the country on medical vacation for weeks on end, and no member of his media team was with him.

Many times, we had been confronted by journalists on why we were sitting pretty in Nigeria, while our principal was confronted by severe health challenges in London.

How did I feel about the situation? I had always told the media, and others who cared to listen, that whoever is on a presidential entourage at any time is the prerogative of the President. In the first 20 months of this administration, the President had made scores of trips, both locally and internationally. There was none, and I repeat, none, in which the media team was excluded. We were always there to keep the world abreast with what the President was doing.

When President Buhari first needed to travel for holiday and medical attention in January this year, it was deemed a private trip, in which the media was not needed. On such journey, you naturally would need security details, your personal physician, protocol and domestic aides, and those were the ones that went. Media? It depended on the principal. What was essential was that the channels of communication be kept open.

When the fuss came that the media handlers of the President were transmitting at best third hand information to the public, it did not bother me as much as it did some people, particularly, journalists. The discretion to have anyone with him at a given time was that of the President, and there was nothing anybody could do about it. I was in direct contact with those who were around him, and that was the best in the circumstances.

When the rumour mill went int overdrive sometime in January that the President had passed on, the first person I called was his personal physician. He laughed, saying nothing of such happened. I was thus confident enough to debunk the malicious information. Before he returned on March 10, in what turned out to be the first leg of his medical treatment, President Buhari had spoken with me personally on phone, the details of which I made available to the public. It was sufficient for me.

The President left again on May 7. I was with him at home till he left for the airport. Information dissemination followed the same pattern, as on the first trip. The aides on hand told me whatever was necessary, and I communicated same, never for once making it appear that the information was first-hand. It was the best and honest thing to do. You work for a straightforward man, it would be a disservice to him for you to begin to spin and bend information.

Never! Not once did I agitate to visit London to see the President. I was trusting enough to receive whatever information was passed to me, knowing the kind of man we serve. Blessed are those who have not seen, and yet believe. A lot of people were using paracetamol for what they considered my headache. They continued to fret that I was not in London, but it didn’t bother me a bit. Ask my wife and children, they would tell you that I am never in unnecessary hurry. I don’t push things, but the lines always fall for me in pleasant places. I have learnt to take all things in my strides, and let the Divine powers work out the rest.

Some people will erroneously call it a laid-back approach, but those who are discerning would see that I had always excelled in whatever I did- physical, professional, spiritual, domestic etc. No need to sing my own praises. Not unto us, but unto Him, be all the glory and praises.

And then, on Wednesday last week, “come came to become” (apologies to K.O Mbadiwe). I received a communication to proceed to London to see the President, along with other members of the presidential media team. To lead the delegation was Alhaji Lai Mohammed, Minister of Information and Culture, while others included myself, Mallam Garba Shehu, Lauretta Onochie, Bayo Omoboriowo, and the Nigerian Television Authority team of Adamu Sambo and Emmanuel Arinhi. Senior Special Assistant on International and Diaspora Matters, Abike Dabiri-Erewa, who was in London on another official matter, eventually joined us to see the President on Saturday.

Leaving the country through the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport on Friday morning, one was as conspicuous as a tiger in a teashop. All that knew me, and saw that I was headed for London, naturally said: “Please give our greetings to Baba o.” They just took it for granted that I was going to London to see the King, and not the Queen this time, as made popular by the pussycat in the nursery rhyme.

The trip aboard the British Airways Boeing 777-200/300 was pleasant and pleasurable. It was like a whole city in the sky. The Nigerians who saw me and my colleague, Mallam Garba Shehu, onboard, also jumped to the same right conclusion as those at the airport: “Please greet Baba for us o.”

On Saturday afternoon, we were ferried from our hotels at the appointed time. At Zero Hour, we were at the Abuja House, Nigerian High Commission, London. As we strode into the living room, I saw with infinite pleasure, the great object of my mission.

Standing tall and ramrod straight was President Muhammadu Buhari, with that ubiquitous smile in place. He was looking a lot better than he had ever looked in the past eight months. My heart leapt for joy, and sang praises to God. Was this not the man they said was on life-support machine? Didn’t they say he could neither walk nor talk? But he was welcoming Alhaji Lai Muhammed, and calling him by name. I was next. I shook the hands of the man I had admired since his days as a military Head-of-State, a man I am not ashamed to call my leader and President today, and any day.

Seated, the President had words for each member of the team, which showed that he had been following events back home very keenly. He commended the Minister of Information and Culture, saying, “Lai, you are all over the place. I see you virtually everyday. You have been working very hard.” Pointing to Abike Dabiri-Erewa, he said, “She is here in her constituency. But me, I am here reluctantly.” We all laughed, and Dabiri-Erewa jocularly issued what you could call a quit notice, saying she didn’t want the President in her constituency again.

How are you, Mr President? “I am okay now. I feel I could go home, but doctors are in charge here, and I’ve learnt to obey my doctors. I’ve learnt to obey orders, rather than be the one giving the orders.”

If you have met the President personally, he is usually full of wisecracks, and this day was not different. He told us he had enough time to watch television, and commended the NTA particularly, and Nigerian media generally, for bringing him up to speed with what was happening back home. He said he had been watching the protests by people who wanted him to return home post-haste, or resign. He mentioned one of the leaders of the protest by name, and laughed. I did not discern any malice in the laughter.

President Buhari told us he seldom got sick, something he had told Nigerians on March 10, at his first return. When we told him millions of people were praying for him at home, in Africa, and even beyond, I saw the glow in his eyes, and he said: “May God reward them,” after noting that what Nigeria did in
The Gambia in January, which forced a sit-tight Yahya Jammeh to quit office, “fetched us a lot of goodwill and latitude.”

We talked about many issues, some of which are not due for public consumption yet. The President was obviously enjoying our company. Then the State Chief of Protocol, Ambassador Lawal Kazaure, popped up (as he always does) and indicated that the allotted time was over.

“Oh dear,” the President exclaimed, reluctant to see us go. It was time for photographs, and we walked into the garden. The President was spry, as he joined us. Bayo Omoboriowo clicked away, and those were the pictures you have seen. The President even almost sprinted, while going back inside. Omoboriowo captured that rare moment.

And to the dining room we proceeded. We sat at that famous table, laden with different kinds of fruits; banana, apple, pear, watermelon, and many others. It was a setting which a man blinded by bile, and suffused with hatred, had described as a previous fast breaking session at Aso Villa during a Ramadan season. Father, forgive him, for he knows not what he says. We ate, heartily. Our appetites had been stimulated by the state in which we met our principal.

Wife of the President, Mrs Aisha Buhari, was at hand to attend to us, urging us to eat as much as we wanted. Halima, daughter of the President, as well as Yusuf, his son, were also there.

It was a pleasure meeting all the presidential aides once again, and we greeted one another warmly: Yau and Lawal (trusted security details), Sunday (the personal cook of many decades), the ADC, SCOP, CSO, CPSO, the personal physician, Tunde Sabiu, Sarki Abbah, and many others. It was a grand re-union.

Lunch over, the President bade each person goodbye, with a handshake. We said to him, “See you soon, sir.” But when Dabiri-Erewa uttered the same, the President laughed, and declared: “No, we will leave you here, as this is your constituency.” The health status of our President, as earlier attested to by Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, during his visit, was a testimony to the healing powers of God. This was a man gravely ill, but restored miraculously. It can only be God. In spite of what haters, wailers, and filthy dreamers imagine, and which they spew out, God remains merciful and immutable. He has the final say. If I were a hater, I would repent now, in sackcloth and ashes.

Yes, I’ve been to London to see the King. The Lion King. But unlike the pussycat in the nursery rhyme, I didn’t frighten any mouse under the chair.

Adesina is Special Adviser to President Muhammadu Buhari on Media and Publicity

Buhari returns today, to address Nigerians on Monday

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Buhari 3

President Muhammadu Buhari will return to the country today after 104 days of medical vacation in London, Femi Adesina, his spokesman has said.

“President Muhammadu Buhari returns to the country later today, after receiving medical attention in London,” Adesina said in a statement on Saturday.

“The President had left the country on May 7, this year, after handing over power to Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, who has functioned as Acting President since then.

“President Buhari is expected to speak to Nigerians in a broadcast by 7 a.m on Monday, August 21, 2017.

“He thanks all Nigerians who have prayed ceaselessly for his recovery and well-being since the beginning of the health challenge.”

PHOTOS: Adeboye in London to ‘pray’ for Buhari

Adeboye Buhari

Enoch Adeboye, General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG), has visited President Muhammadu Buhari in London.

Buhari confirmed the visit, with pictures, via his official Twitter handle, with a caption: “I thank Pastor Adeboye for visiting today, and for his prayers and good wishes. May God continue to bless him and his work.”

Adeboye becomes the second prominent religious leader to visit the President following the visit of Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, on August 5.

Buhari has been on medical vacation in London since May 7, and all recent callers at the Abuja House, where he is recuperating, say his recovery is going on smoothly.

Adeboye Buhari 2

Buhari himself said last week that there had been “tremendous improvement” in his health — only that he he hadn’t been given the go-ahead by his doctors.

‘We’re not corrupt’… police spokesman dismisses NBS bribery report

Police describe NBS bribery report as misleading, based on hearsays1

The Nigeria Police Force says the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) reporting ranking police and judicial officers as the most corrupt is “misleading, misrepresentation of facts and based on hearsay”.

This is contained in a statement issued by Jimoh Moshood, the Force Public Relations Officer on Friday.

The NBS carried out the survey in conjunction with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).

The police authorities claimed that the so-called survey was carried out “two years ago” and does not reflect the fact that the present leadership of the Force “has fully keyed into the change mantra of the Federal Government of Nigeria, (the) Change Begins with Me (campaign) and total war against corruption”.

Moshood stated that the Force had also established and re-positioned its mechanisms for fighting corruption, bribery and other corrupt tendencies both internally and externally.

“The Nigeria Police Force sees the report as a clear demonstration of mischief and calculated attempt to promote campaign of calumny against police officers,” the statement reads.

“The report is entirely misleading, a clear misrepresentation of facts, essentially based on hearsay which made it unempirical, and the survey instrument absolutely inadequate and therefore a plain distortion of the improved situation in the Force as a result of the renewed commitment and determination to fight corruption, bribery and corrupt tendencies in the ranks of the personnel of the Force,”

“For avoidance of doubt, since the inception of the present administration of the Nigeria Police Force in July 2016, after the reported survey has been conducted and concluded, the Inspector General of Police has introduced and implemented diverse internal reforms aimed at bringing corruption to zero level in the Force.”

According to Moshood, some of the anti-corruption initiatives as introduced by the Ibrahim Idris-led Police Force include: the revitalization of the “X-Squad Unit” which is responsible for the “arrest, detention, investigation and prosecution” of corrupt officers; the launch of the Public Complaints Rapid Response Unit (PCRRU), which is responsible for “receiving and attending to reports of corruption from members of the public against Police officers”; and the collaboration with stakeholders in the criminal justice system and non-governmental organizations to train and re-train Police Personnel to shun bribery and corruption.

The statement the commitment of the Police under IGP Idris to “continue to fight, discourage and shun corruption, bribery and corrupt tendencies within and outside the Force, and continue to discharge its statutory responsibilities according to the rule of law despite the obvious distractions from the report”.

NSCDC uncovers Illegal underground refinery in Sokoto

Illegal oil refining now taking place in Sokoto says NSCDC
The Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) says it has discovered an illegal refinery in Sokoto state.

Incidents of illegal crude oil refining is common in the oil-rich Niger Delta region but this is the first of such instance in Sokoto, which is a non-oil producing State.

Babangida Dutsin-ma, the Sokjoto State NSCDC Commandant, said this during an interview wit NAN on Friday.

He said the “mini refinery”, which was being operated from a rented apartment, was discovered by operatives of the NSCDC surveillance team. The apartment belongs to a popular Sokoto businessman and is located along Bodinga road in the outskirt of Sokoto metropolis.

“The NSCDC anti-vandal team on surveillance detected the centre in which those involved in the adulteration dug a big hole using a large tank in perpetrating the act,” Dutsin-ma said.

“The ditch is connected to a transformer from which they tap electricity for heating the adulterated products,’’ he added.

He also said that preliminary investigation showed that the “criminals” use adulterate Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), also known as petrol, and black oil to produce various petroleum products, which they then push into the black market for sale to unsuspecting consumers.

Dutsin-ma said that the perpetrators of the act fled the scene on sighting officials of the NSCDC, but added that some of their equipment were confiscated.

They include jerry cans, empty metal drums, electric cables and containers, used in adulterating the petroleum products.

He urged members of the public to assist the command with useful information that could lead to the arrest of the suspects.

National assembly are a bunch of unarmed robbers, says Obasanjo

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Olusegun Obasanjo

Olusegun Obasanjo, former President, on Thursday described the National Assembly as a “bunch of unarmed robbers”, saying the earn “bogus” pay.

Speaking in Ibadan at the public presentation of a I am Kagara, I Weave the Sands of Sahara, a book written by Professor Mark Nwagwu, Obasanjo urged the federal government to respect its 2009 agreement with the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).

However, he warned that a situation where the country spends so much on overheads does not bode well for socioeconomic development.

“Government allows itself to be stampeded into signing agreement particularly when one group or the other withdraws it services and goes on strike. After the agreement has been signed, without full consultation within government, implementation becomes an issue,” Punch quoted him as saying.

“But an agreement is an agreement; whoever the agent is that signed that agreement on your behalf, you are bound by it. You may now have to renegotiate to have a new agreement but the agreement earlier signed remains an agreement.

“When the university teachers go on strike, there is an agreement; and when doctors go on strike, there will be a special agreement. And when the universities teachers see that the agreement reached with the doctors is different from theirs, they go on strike and this is bad for our economy.

“The way we are going about spending all our revenue to pay overheads, we will not develop. And we will have ourselves to blame. Ninety per cent of revenue is used to pay overheads, allowances, salaries and not much is left for capital development. In a situation like that, we have to rethink.

“It is even worse for the National Assembly. They will abuse me again but I will never stop talking about them. They are a bunch of unarmed robbers.

“They are one of the highest paid in the world where we have 75 per cent of our people living in abject poverty. They will abuse me tomorrow and if they don’t, maybe they are sleeping. The behaviour and character of the National Assembly should be condemned and roundly condemned.”


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Pressure mounts on Cameroon to release journalist jailed for covering Boko Haram

RSF demands release of Cameroonian journalist jailed for covering Boko Haram activities

Reporters Without Borders (RSF) in collaboration with other international non-governmental organisations are demanding the release of Ahmed Abba, a journalist who was handed a 10-year jail sentence in April for covering activities of the Boko Haram terrorist group.

Abba was a correspondent with Radio France Internationale in Cameroon before he was arrested and tried before a military court in Yaoundé, the country’s capital.

He was subsequently sentenced to 10 years in prison and fined the sum of €85,000 on a charge of “laundering the proceeds of a terrorist act”.

However, Abba claims he is innocent, insisting that he always kept a professional journalist’s distance with the terrorist group.

A coordinated support committee was launched by the RSF ahead of Abba’s appeal hearing on Thursday in order to step up public and political pressure on the Cameroonian authorities.

Cléa Kahn-Sriber, head of RSF’s Africa desk, said: “Bringing together well-known figures from around the world and especially Africa, the committee has decided to begin online by creating a Facebook page in which we will share the messages of his supporters.

“This is just the first step. The campaign will grow in strength if the authorities do not free Ahmed Abba.”

The campaign to free Abba has received continent-wide support, not only from journalists and media houses but also from other performance artistes such as musicians and comedians.

So far, a total of 36 organisations, including Amnesty International, Journalist in Danger (JED), the International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), and the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) have joined the campaign to free Abba from prison custody.

The CPJ has also named Abba as one of the winners of its 2017 International Press Freedom Award.

“Each day that RFI journalist Ahmed Abba spends behind bars in a Cameroonian jail is another travesty of justice, which sends a chilling message to the media community in Cameroon,” said Angela Quintal, CPJ Africa Program Coordinator.

“We urge the Cameroonian government to free Abba without delay and to right this injustice. The world is watching.”

According to RSF, the proceedings against Abba were marked by gross irregularities.

“After his (Abba’s) arrest on 30 July 2015, he was held incommunicado and tortured by the intelligence services for nearly three months (and) no hard evidence was ever produced during the trial, which was postponed 18 times.” an RSF statement read in part.

Cameroon is ranked 130th out of 180 countries in RSF’s 2017 World Press Freedom Index, four places lower than in 2016.

The Boko Haram terrorist group is based in the north-eastern region of Nigeria but it began stepping up operations in northern Cameroon in 2014.

Help comes for Chibok boy injured in the spinal cord by Boko Haram

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Ali Ahmadu

Dickens Sanomi Foundation, An Abuja-based charity, has offered to pay the medical bill of Ali Ahmadu, a six year-old boy from Chibok, Borno State, who suffered damage to his spinal cord during a Boko Haram attack in 2014.

Boko Haram militants ran over the boy with a motorcycle during an invasion of the town, where 275 schoolgirls were kidnapped by the insurgents.

According to a statement by the foundation, the medical bill for the spinal cord surgery to enable Ali to walk again is $48,000 (N14,640,000.00). Surgery will take place at a medical facility in Dubai, United Arab Emirates,

“Ali needs corrective surgery to enable him walk again after he was overrun by a motorcycle in Chibok by Boko Haram members during a night raid,” said Nuhu Kwajafa, Coordinator of Global Initiative For Peace, Love and Care (GIPLC), the NGO spearheading the campaign for the medical recovery of the young victim.

Kwajafa said the total financial requirement for the complete treatment of Ali was put at $60,000.00 (N18,300,00.00), including feeding, accommodation for three months.

He expressed thanks and appreciation to the National Assembly and all well-meaning Nigerians for their support and contribution, thus far.

Members of the GIPLC were at the Dickens Sanomi Foundation office in Abuja as part of the initiative to ensure that young Ali walks again.

They were received by Igho Sanomi, Chairman of the Foundation, and Board of Trustee members.

Sanomi, who is also Chairman of energy company Taleveras said, “as a father, it is very touching to see a young boy like this suffer. It is sad what some of our kids have to go through. This is an opportunity for us to show our love to those who need it.

“Although education remains the key focus of the Foundation, kids have to be healthy before they can attend school. On behalf of the board of trustees of Dickens Sanomi Foundation, we will take care of Ali, this will include paying the hospital bill and we will visit him in the hospital after the surgery.”

Founded in 2011 by the children of Dickens Oghenereumu Patrick Sanomi, the Dickens Sanomi Foundation (DSF) serves to commemorate the life of the family’s patriarch and to provide charitable support for that particular objective upon which he placed such great value, the education of Nigeria’s youth.

 

Saraki, Dogara visit Buhari in London

Saraki, Dogara visit Buhari in London

Bukola Saraki, Senate President, and Yakubu Dogara, Speaker of the House of Representatives, visited President Muhammadu Buhari in London on Wednesday.

This was made known by Lauretta Onochie, Special Assistant to the President on Social Media.

“President Buhari receives in audience Senate President Bukola Saraki and Speaker of House of Representatives Hon. Yakubu Dogara at the Abuja House London on 17th Aug 2017,” Lauretta posted on her Facebook page.

The visit of Dogara and Saraki comes five days after the president’s media team visited him in London.

Calls for the president’s return or resignation continue to mount back home, but Buhari has himself admitted that although there is “tremendous improvement” in his health and he wishes to return home, he hasn’t been given the go-ahead by his doctors.