Buhariwatch: Why Aisha Buhari struck By Martins Oloja

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This is the news from Aso Presidential Villa the old Lagos-Ibadan axis of the press nicknamed “Aso Rock’ in the heat of the bogeyman called June 12, 1993. Please, don’t get it twisted; a lot of arm-twisting has been going on inside the State House, Abuja. Decent sources have confirmed that some political battles have been raging beyond the Council Chambers General IBB, the then Head of State commissioned in May 1991 before he moved Nigeria’s capital from Lagos to Abuja on Thursday, December, 12, 1991.

And so covert sources within the seat of power that I have covered for more than 27 years as a reporter, writer and editor have revealed to me that there is much more to the political statement the First Lady, Aisha Buhari made to the BBC than meets the eye. Insiders have told those who cared to ask pertinent questions that Hajia Aisha Buhari “didn’t talk to the BBC to spite her husband or to make her husband too small in the eye of the public”. It is understood that Madam Aisha spoke to a foreign news media from the depth of knowledge of frustrations her husband has revealed to her about the “influence of the few members of the kitchen cabinet” who are known to have influenced a lot of politics, policies and appointments by the president so far”.

Open source intelligence, I mean publicly available sources have claimed that some remnants of the old foxes of the “Kaduna Mafia” that allegedly emasculated President Umaru Yar’adua’s government are in the mix of suspected manipulation of the president who once honestly confessed that there was a limit to what he could do at 72…
Though sources have mentioned that some of the president’s men ‘in the dock’ include Babagana Kingibe who was earlier fingered in the politics of nominating career ambassadors without recourse to the ministry of foreign affairs; General Babagana Monguno, National Security Adviser (NSA); the Chief of Staff to the President, Alhaji Abba Kyari; Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr. Babachir David Lawal and the Big Cahuna, Alhaji Mamman Daura, earlier identified by Dr Junaid Mohammed as the the man who makes the final decision. Besides, an open source earlier revealed that one Hajia Hajo Sani, former Minister of Women Affairs, who hails from Adamawa state was one of the powers unleashed on the First Lady as her Special Assistant to prevent her from exploding the way she just did.
In a surprise move, she signaled to her husband that she might not back him at the next election unless he shook up his government.
In the controversial BBC interview, Mrs. Buhari suggested THAT her husband’s government had been hijacked by only a “few people”, who were behind presidential appointments, among other decisions.

She revealed that the president did not know most of the officials he had appointed. Specifically, in the interview with Naziru Mikailu from BBC Hausa, Mrs Buhari said: “The president does not know 45 out of 50 of the people he appointed and I don’t know them either, despite being his wife of 27 years.”

And it is not for trite reasons therefore that most newspaper editorials have condemned presidential appointments so far as “parochial” as the president’s zone has taken more than 85% of notable public sector jobs so far.

And the president, who was on a visit to Germany when the interview was aired, responded by saying his wife belonged in his kitchen.
Standing alongside German Chancellor Angela Merkel at a news conference, the president laughed off his wife’s accusations.

“I don’t know which party my wife belongs to, but she belongs to my kitchen and my living room and the other room,” he said.
Mr Buhari added that having run for president three times and having succeeded the fourth, he could “claim superior knowledge over her”.

The influence ‘of a few people’ in the mix is the crux of the matter that has generated heated debate everywhere. This development has, in fact, fuelled agitation for true federalism by elements from the Middle Belt and the entire southern states with three distinct regions. President Buhari was sworn in on May 29, 2015 with a promise to tackle corruption and nepotism that allegedly marked the last administration. But we learned that he has been disturbed of late as commentators have been saying that what he has done about corruption has been dismissed as tokenism. Besides, people at public functions are saying he has been fighting corrupt people instead of fighting corruption.

What is more, the president’s wife lamented that people who did not share the vision of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) were now appointed to top posts because of the influence a “few people” wield. The ruling Party’s officials, especially from the South, have hailed her position. This is her complaint:

“Some people are sitting down in their homes folding their arms only for them to be called to come and head an agency or a ministerial position”.
Though the First Lady’s decision to go public with her concerns has shocked many people, insiders have said that the very educated and sociable First Lady “got enough intelligence about the level of discontent with the president’s leadership”.

 

 

Source- The Guardian

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