Issues On President Buhari's Medical Vacation
Buhari Medical Vacation
If President Muhammadu Buhari arrives
in Abuja tomorrow, and regales the nation with phenomenal sprints,
reminiscent of an Olympic athletics gold medallist, the lingering
controversy about his health status and rumoured death will remain with
us for several months to come.
Traumatised, along with Buhari’s family
members, is a nation agog with rumours and social media frenzy
announcing the President’s death or abject health status, painting
scenarios of every conceivable stripe. New websites sprung up to amplify
deafening rumours about the coming Armageddon in the event of the
President’s death. It is difficult to know what to believe in the midst
of so much conflicting information, official denials through photographs
dismissed by some as exhumed from old files and other photographs
circulated on social media showing Buhari as vegetating. Rumour,
communication scholars tell us, predominates in societies where
information is artificially made scarce, and officialdom speaks in
muffled tones or engages in blatant doublespeak. The information
managers of President Buhari are without doubt splendid professionals
but their skills would appear to have been tested to their very limits
with the way and manner they have so far handled this admittedly
sensitive national issue.
It all began with the use of the word
“medical vacation”, which naturally provoked the question: What is a
medical vacation? A vacation is planned well ahead of time especially
for executives with heavy work schedules; but there were suggestions of
an emergency in the way the Acting President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo,
rushed back from an international conference in Europe to direct the
nation’s affairs. Medical vacation? Does this remind anyone of the
expression “alternative facts”, recently popularised by Kellyanne
Conway, Senior White House official, in the Donald Trump presidency in
the United States?
When you factor too that Buhari had gone
on two earlier “medical vacations” to London in the course of a
Presidency that is less than two years old, then you begin to see some
of the reasons for concern and what the US-based Professor, Farooq
Kperogi, once described as the “Yaraduanisation of Buhari’s health”.
Kperogi’s article published in the Daily Trust in June last
year expressed the alarm at the way in which Buhari’s media handlers
more or less misled the public on his June 2016 trip to the United
Kingdom. The trip occurred only a few days after information officials
had insisted that “the President is as fit as a fiddle”. Subsequent
events, of course, contradicted this “alternative fact”. A similar
scenario would appear to have played out in the current imbroglio, to
the extent that the government information department consistently
downplayed what would appear to have been a somewhat serious medical
condition.
Another issue raised in Kperogi’s
article is also pertinent here. This concerns Buhari’s persistent
recourse to overseas treatment, despite spending so much, N4bn, in 2016,
on the upgrade of the Aso Rock Clinic. The scholar, quoting a British
journalist, had asked humorously how the President would feel were he to
be treated by one of the many Nigerian doctors in the UK. This point
should be taken in the context of an earlier directive by the President
concerning public officials not going for overseas medical treatment at
public expense. In other words, is this a case of one set of rules for
the rulers and another set of rules for the citizens? Whatever the
arguments drummed up in its support, there is a hint of national
embarrassment and abasement in our persistent failure to build a world
class medical facility in Nigeria where our leaders would feel
comfortable to be treated.
There are several ways of reading the
ongoing drama and national frenzy surrounding Buhari’s rumoured death or
terminal incapacity. The heated discourse, laced with huge doses of
irrationality, has tapped into the national question especially the
North-South divide and religious polarisation, with conspiracy theory
mushrooming about the North seeking to frustrate an Osinbajo Presidency
if matters came to that. It is to Buhari’s credit however that he made a
proper handover to Osinbajo before leaving for London.
There, also, is the fact that this saga
is occurring in the midst of a heated debate concerning the governance
record of the Buhari administration especially as soar away inflation
continues to ravage the pockets of Nigerians. Illustrative of this
ferment is the proposed march spearheaded by award winning hip pop star,
2face Idibia, scheduled for next Sunday and Monday, as well as the
alternate march being organised by the Buhari Nationwide Solidarity
Group. This apart, one encounters these days an audacity of diatribe
against Buhari’s performance on the part of activists, some of whom
advertised themselves as disillusioned former supporters of the
President .True, it is
uncharitable and ill-mannered to wish anyone who is languishing death or
grave illness. As some commentators have noted however, there may be a
covert link between the uncharitable proclamations and the nation’s
current doldrums in which very few things seem to work. Of course, it is
stupid to imagine that if Buhari, God forbid, is out of the way, the
nation will suddenly recover. Nonetheless, we must pity those who are
seeking escapes into death wishes and fantasy in order to feel good.
All said and done, there is the feeling
that a veil of secrecy hangs around the health status of the number one
citizen, with the possible implication that those who know or ought to
know are complicit in a conspiracy of half-truths. For as long as this
state of affairs persists, rumours of every kind will feast on the veil
of silence or reticence. Once the lid is lifted and information begins
to circulate about the true state of things, the vendors of the rumour
mills and social media fabricators will lose their jobs. Before the
election that produced the Buhari Presidency, this columnist admonished
due diligence with respect to Candidate Buhari as he was at the time “Nigeria has a history of sleep-walking
into avoidable crises”, I drew attention to certain comments concerning
the state of the President’s health, and the need for the nation to have
full disclosure. Nothing of the sort happened as my voice was drowned
in a din of partisan noises, made shrill by the exigencies of the
campaign season.
Even as of today, we are none the wiser
concerning the status of the President’s health except as we infer it
from his overseas “medical vacation”. The ongoing controversy and crude
death wishes should serve as a turning point for reversing the gap in
communication, especially in a democracy. Only the President, not his
advisers, can shed complete light on his medical history. It is
possible, even likely that in a polarised polity such as ours, full
disclosure may well lead to calls for the President’s impeachment,
especially if he does not have a clean bill. But even at that,
legislators are discerning enough to differentiate a very bad case from
one that grudgingly passes the mark.
The bottom line is that Nigerians should
no longer feel deceived or cheated concerning the facts about a
President who, his weaknesses notwithstanding, has contributed his bit
to the unfinished task of redeeming Nigeria.
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