A fierce, momentous national emergency is confronting Nigeria now—the emergency of President Muhammadu Buhari’s capacity to govern.
This concern should transcend partisan political loyalties because it strikes at the very core of the urgency for national self-preservation.
It is apparent to anyone who cares to observe that Buhari is unwell. People used to give expression to this concern on the fringes of polite society in Nigeria. But it’s now increasingly becoming mainstream.
A viral internet message by a diasporan Nigerian in France who attended Buhari’s interactions with the Nigerian community in Paris on November 12, 2018 during the Paris Peace Summit said Buhari had not the vaguest awareness who one of his aides was. He openly asked who she was. No one was allowed to record the interaction because the president’s minders knew awkward moments like that would arise.
That’s precisely why he had been shielded from unmediated public communication for long.
The people who are bent on imposing him on Nigeria know he has challenges but don’t want the world to know this.
Nevertheless, with his disastrously mortifying performance at Thursday’s #NgTheCandidatestown hallseries (he barely understood the questions he was asked and gave astonishingly off-centre responses to the ones he understood)and his awkward, pity-inspiring verbal miscues on the campaign trail, the cat is now out of the bag.
Buhari’s problems aren’t mere “senior moment” problems that I wrote about in a widely shared June 20, 2015 column titled “Criticizing Buhari Over ‘President Michelle of West Germany’ Gaffe is Ignorant.”
In fact, the doctor who told me he strongly suspects Buhari has dementia (and possibly Alzheimer’s) read my 2015 article where I explained away Buhari’s “Michelle of Western Germany” gaffe as an age-induced memory lapse, which is informally called senior moments in America. He said it was beyond that.
On the campaign trail, we saw that Buhari could not remember the day he was sworn in.
He said he came to power on May 19 instead of May 29. He couldn’t tell a “presidential candidate,” a “senatorial candidate” and a “gubernatorial candidate” apart.
He misidentified Great Ogboru, APC’s governorship candidate in Delta State, as his party’s “presidential candidate.” Ogboru corrected him by saying he was the “gubernatorial candidate,” but Buhari called him the “senatorial candidate.” After the second correction, Buhari finally called him the “governatorial candidate.”
He also didn’t remember when he was Petroleum Minister.
“Since 1984, or 78 to 79 when I was the Minister, I never lost interest in the petroleum industry,” he said in Delta State.
Well, he was appointed the equivalent of a Petroleum minister in March 1976.
Recall, too, that when he visited the family house of the late President Shehu Shagari to commiserate with them over the death of their patriarch, he didn’t have the presence of mind to write anything on the condolence register; he just signed his name and couldn’t even get the date right.
He slipped at a campaign rally in Lokoja, the Kogi State capital, but, curiously, his aides who caught him didn’t seem fazed, indicating that this is a fairly habitual occurrence beyond the glare of cameras. That’s evidence of weakened motor skills, which doctors say is another symptom of dementia.
People around the president are intimately familiar with his health issues. As a consequence, he is being taken advantage of by several people close to him. Aso Rock insiders say Buhari doesn’t remember anything, so no one even obeys his instructions—if he gives any at all.
The last person to see him gets him to do whatever they want. Someone from the Presidential Villa told me it’s precisely because of this fact that governors frequent the Villa several times in a week; they are in a race to be the last people to see the president before he takes decisions and signs off on them.
If you think with Buhari as president, Nigeria has a president, you should sue your brain for non-support; you’re NOT thinking!
We have a national emergency on our hands. Without a doubt, other people are ruling on his behalf, and his own wife hinted at that when she said her husband’s presidency has been hijacked by a three-man cabal.
If Nigeria were a functional nation, the National Assembly should have constituted a team of medical experts to examine the state of the president’s physical and mental state.
If he is found to have dementia, as I strongly suspect he does, he should be declared incapacitated and removed from office. And he would certainly not be a candidate for president. That’s what Section 137 (c) of our constitution requires.
He should go and rest, not rule. People who matter in Nigeria should rise superior to partisanship and save the country.
American journalist, Alvin Toffler once said, “If we do not learn from history, we shall be compelled to relive it.”
True. But if we do not change the future, we shall be compelled to endure it. And that could be worse.
I hope the right thing is done before it’s too late.
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