By Dele Sobowale
"Silence is golden when you can’t think of an [intelligent] answer” – Mohammed Ali, 1942-2016.
Buhari’s death has exposed more horrors about the real attitude of those who held the highest posts in his government – which was largely a failure based on lies and hypocrisy.
Last week, my column addressed Garba Shehu’s confession that he told
Nigerians lies about Aso Rock rats to cover up Buhari’s infirmities which might
have rendered him unable to preside.
Today, it
is Femi Adesina, another top official of the government, who is under
scrutiny for what he said in defence of his late boss.
To be quite
candid, if only the dead can be aware of what their “friends” say about them,
they would seek the forgiveness of their enemies.
Adesina just rubbished Buhari’s reputation for simplicity and honesty by his recent utterances on a television show.
To be quite
candid, I was not surprised. A man who could ask Nigerians to give up their
ancestral farmlands to herdsmen, by saying “Your land or your life”, lost the
respect of all farmers in Nigeria.
A pastor
justifying coveting other peoples’ land by herdsmen – in order to keep his job
– should step down from the pulpit or be pushed down.
I write as
one of the victims of herdsmen.
The quote
above was from Muhammed Ali long after he retired from the ring and was racked
by Parkinson disease.
A younger boxer, then called Cassius Clay, had a different advice for
people asked to make comments: “It is better to remain silent and be thought a
fool; than to talk and remove all doubt.”
Buhari’s
death in a London hospital, apart from revealing the futility of expensive
medical tourism, once God had said its time, has exposed finally the hypocrisy
of a political candidate who campaigned on ending the idea of public officials
going abroad for health care.
All the
money in our depleted external reserves cannot buy life when the Almighty says
“enough, come home”.
“It is unthinkable that wisdom should ever be
popular” – Johann
Goethe, 1749-1832
The Saudis
were clever.
They made
sure that Yar’Adua’s death was not associated with their hospital. They sent
our former President back in a box – to go and die at Aso Rock.
The British
were greedy and stupid. They should have sent Buhari back the same way.
Incidentally,
if the doctors treating him and Buhari’s family had been wise, they would have
brought him back alive to Nigeria instead of being delivered as cargo by
Nigeria Air Force One.
They would
have avoided the backlash trailing his demise now.
Few people
would have remembered what he said when campaigning in 2014-5.
Hypocrisy
is saying one thing and doing something else.
APC MANIFESTO PARTLY PRESENTED
As the PC
of another party in 2014, he ran his campaign on a promise “to increase the
quality of all Federal Government owned hospitals to world class standard
within five years. Invest in cutting edge technology such as tele-medicine…”
That was
his promise to Nigerians. Implied in that promise was another one: With world
class FG-owned hospitals, all over Nigeria, nobody in government, or Nigeria,
would need to go abroad for treatment.”
That was
the solemn promise made to Nigerians by Buhari; which paved the way for his
election.
That was
not the only policy statement. He also criticized his predecessors for
maintaining a fleet of presidential aircraft.
By 2021,
none of the Federal Teaching Hospitals had been elevated to world class.
On the
contrary, they have all fallen behind global standards.
Consequently,
the President of Nigeria had travelled to London at least three times for
treatment.
The first
trip covered three months; and despite all outward appearances, the man was living
on borrowed time.
He got
steadily worse – physically and mentally.
From 2017
until he passed away in July 2025, Buhari’s health situation had been wrapped
in deceptive cover-up by his family and handlers and only God knows how much
Nigerians have paid – just for parking a presidential plane in the United
Kingdom – waiting for a President who betrayed them.
We are now
learning that he spent about 255 days in total in a London hospital – where the
presidential room can go as high as 3,500 pounds sterling. Here is what my
calculator told me about the total cost of Buhari just lying down.
Room
charges at the presidential unit at 3,500 pounds sterling per day; 500 pounds
per day to park his jet, estimated drugs and tests about 200 pounds per day;
estacode for him and at least six accompanying staff; estacode and travel
expense of officials who had to shuttle between Abuja and London altogether
must have set the nation back about N20 million per day.
That was
how much a famous banker, name withheld, was shedding before expiring in
another London hospital. There is no reason to assume that President Buhari
would off-load less. That is one of the truths they were hiding from us;
because the monumental cost resulted in a President who could no longer go to office.
He had
become vegetative – like Yar’Adua after Saudi.
That was
why Aso Rock’s two-legged rats had to concoct a disgraceful lie about rats
eating the cables.
Just as we
were still reeling from the blow of Garba Shehu’s revelation, Adesina went on
television to mount his own defence.
ADESINA’S DEFENCE
“If he had
said ‘I will do my medicals in Nigeria’, just to show off or something, he
would long have been dead because there may not be the expertise needed in the
country. But, he needed to be alive to be able to lead the country to a point
where we will have that expertise” – Adesina on Channels Television.
When Martin
Luther, 1483-1546, declared that “For where God built a church, there the Devil
would also build a chapel”, the theologian leader of the Protestant Reformation
was in no doubt that majority of those who enter churches, including the
pastors, go to the Devil’s chapel to worship. We are seeing this on display
here.
Otherwise,
how can a ‘man of God’ claim to know that Buhari would have died earlier?
Perhaps, he
can also tell us when he would have died if he was treated in Nigeria.
His second
statement, made after Buhari had died, has been answered by the Nigerian
doctors as “ignorant, insensitive and disrespectful to thousands of
professionals who continue to serve under challenging conditions in the
country.”
They were
being polite – extremely polite.
That
declaration by Adesina sent me racing into the VANGUARD BOOK OF QUOTATIONS: to a quotation I hate to
reproduce: “(Some) journalists sometimes
say a thing that they know isn’t true in the hope that if they keep on saying
it, long enough, it will turn out to be true” (Julien Benda, 1857-1952).
Buhari
campaigned on vast improvement of our Teaching Hospitals. He was in office for
two years and presented two budgets before his first known and most prolonged
medical tourism occurred.
Can Adesina
point to a single line in those budgets where Buhari made special allocations
which would “lead the country to a point where we would have such expertise?”
One would
have thought that after his brush with death and his return in 2017, he would have
developed a more positive attitude towards improved healthcare for Nigerians.
Instead, he
presented six more annual budgets with scant regard for his campaign promises
and without leading us to “have such expertise”.
On the
contrary, the gap between Nigeria and the world widened and infant and maternal
mortality increased to the point where we now lead the world in those two
calamities.
Buhari’s
successor declared in far away Saint Lucia on July 3, 2025, “We inherited a
country that was near bankruptcy”.
Even a
dunce knows that a nation on the verge of economic collapse could not possibly
have been led to improve on its health delivery.
Obviously,
while the nation’s health system collapsed, the President was indulging himself
to the tune of N2 billion or more.
Now that we
know better the quality of some of Buhari’s advisers, we can forgive the man
for his woeful failures while in office.
LAST LINE: I would prefer to make this
the last article on Buhari’s health mis-adventure – if his handlers would let us
forget the whole thing. Otherwise…
FUTURE CONSEQUENCES OF NAME CHANGE
“What’s in a name? …” – William Shakespeare,
1564-1616.
Renaming
institutions, buildings, roads, etc is not new to Nigeria and the world. What
is worrisome about the current trend is the frequency and the short-sightedness
attaching to it.
It has
become so blatantly political that it taints the honour with which it should
have been invested.
A few are
totally incomprehensible.
On July 3,
President Tinubu proclaimed that he “inherited an economy on the brink of
bankruptcy.”
Everybody
knows who handed him that economy.
Less than
two weeks later, a major university was renamed to honour him. The questions
are: For what? For ruining the economy?
Dr Olunloyo
was Governor of Oyo State for three months – October to December 1983.
Yet, the Ibadan Polytechnic was renamed for him. Why? Take it from me;
some of these will be reversed in the future.
*Dr. Sobowale is a commentator on
public issues
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