Family members, friends and senior
government officials who attempted to call or pay visits to President
Muhammadu Buhari in the United Kingdom are having a difficult time
getting access.can
authoritatively report that four aides of the president control access
to President Buhari, who is on extended medical vacation in the United
Kingdom.
The aides are the President’s nephew,
Mamman Daura; the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Domestic
Affairs, Sarki Aba; Buhari’s Chief of Staff, Abba Kyari; and Personal
Assistant to the President; Tunde Sabiu.
Our correspondent learnt that anyone who
wants to telephone or see the president in London must get the approval
of one or more of the four aides. The only two individuals who are
exempted from seeking permission to visit Buhari or call him are Acting
President Yemi Osinbajo and First Lady, Aisha Buhari.
gathered that the
First Lady is said not to be happy with the way the aides have been
managing access to her husband. The first lady’s relationship with the
president’s aides has not always been cordial. In October last year,
Aisha granted a highly controversial interview to the British Broadcasting Corporation, in which she alleged that a cabal had hijacked her husband’s government.
According to a source in government, who
spoke on condition of anonymity, Buhari’s wife had voiced her
displeasure to close friends and associates that the cabal she
complained about were still the ones in charge of her husband in London.
“The First Lady is not with him
permanently in London, which should normally not be the case. She has
had a few clashes with the cabal and she is not happy that they are also
firmly in control in London. That’s why she goes and comes. She is not
happy with the atmosphere over there.”
gathered that
these individuals have turned down numerous requests from the
President’s friends, associates and members of his cabinet to see him.
Since Buhari extended his medical
vacation on February 19, those who have visited him in his Abuja House
residence in London include the Senate President, Bukola Saraki; Senate
Leader, Ahmad Lawan; Speaker, House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara,
Deputy Speaker, Yusuf Lasun; Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu; Chief Bisi
Akande; Ogun State Governor and Ibikunle Amosun.
It was gathered that the visits were
initiated by the guests who made requests which had to be reviewed by
the president’s aides. Daura was present during the Tinubu and Akande’s
visit. Daura, who holds no political office in the present dispensation,
has repeatedly been touted as the most powerful person in the present
government, prompting Buhari to publicly declare late October 2016 that,
“I’m in charge, not Mamman Daura.”
Daura travels with the president and is
often seen with him. Daura is believed to belong to the legendary
‘Kaduna Mafia’, an influential group of young northern Nigerian
intellectuals, civil servants, business tycoons and military officers
residing or conducting business in the former northern capital city of
Kaduna. The group reportedly influenced government policies during the
military era and previous civilian administrations. Other famous members
of the group were Adamu Ciroma, Ibrahim Tahir, Mahmud Tukur, and former
Central Bank of Nigeria Governor, Adamu Ciroma; former Minister of
Internal Affairs, Ibrahim Tahir; former Minister of Commerce and
Industry during the Buhari-Idiagbon regime, Dr. Mahmud Tukur; former
Sultan of Sokoto, Ibrahim Dasuki; former Head of the Technical
Committee on Privatisation and Commercialisation, Hamza Zayyad; a former
minister, Umaru Mutallab; former presidential aspirant and number-two
man, General Shehu Yar’Adua; a former Vice Chancellor, Ahmadu Bello
University, Professor Ango Abdullahi; Professor Jibril Aminu and others.
Kyari is known to be one of the
President’s closest aides. He plans Buhari’s schedules while ministers
are said to queue in his office to see the President. Kyari’s influence
became clear to many during a retreat organised by the presidency for
the then ministers-designate. While declaring the retreat open on
November 5, 2015, Buhari said, “In addition, all communications and
appointments from you (ministers) to the Presidency should be routed
through the Office of the Chief of Staff as it is the normal (procedure)
in this presidential system.”
While much is not known about Sabiu, who
was appointed shortly after Buhari’s election, he is reportedly related
to Daura. Sources in government told our correspondent that the
President ‘feels relaxed’ around him and has a lot of trust in him. The
same was said of Aba, who was described as ‘quiet but one of the few
people that can make anyone see the President.”
Presented with the names of the aides
controlling access to the president, a source in the presidency
confirmed the list. The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity
because he was not authorised to speak on the subject, said, “The names
you have are accurate and they are the ones controlling access to the
President in London, even in Nigeria. Some ministers, aides and service
chiefs tried to talk to the President on the phone, but they turned them
down.
“The few people that have seen the
President only saw him because they agreed to it. If they didn’t, it
would never have happened, apart from Governor Amosun, who everyone
knows is one of Buhari’s best friends.”
The source refused to give the names of those whose requests to see Buhari were turned down.
Meanwhile, Buhari on Saturday spoke with
his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, on the
telephone for the first time since he embarked on his extended medical
vacation on January 19.
Adesina, who felt elated about the development, confirmed the conversation on his Facebook page and Twitter handle.
He had during previous interviews said he was only speaking with those around the President.
Giving details of his discussion with
the President, Adesina said Sabiu called him at exactly 2.43pm and asked
that he hold on for the President.
On recognition of the President’s voice, Adesina said he screamed and said, “Mr. President, I have missed you. How are you sir?”
He continued, “He (the President) first
laughed. That familiar laugh. Then he said, ‘I am still resting. Thank
you for holding out against mischief makers.’
“I said it was my duty, the very least I could do, adding how happy I was to speak with him. He asked, ‘How is your family?’
“I said we were fine, and he asked me to
extend his greetings to them. ‘I hope to call you again,’ Mr. President
said, and I bade him farewell, adding ‘Best wishes, sir.’”
Adesina described the telephone conversation as a defining moment for him.
He said, “It was a defining moment for
me. For more than a month, I had always spoken with aides who are with
the President in London.
“Not once did I ask them to take the
phone to him, deliberately so, because I didn’t need to speak with him
to validate the fact that he was alive. And since he is on vacation, he
has a right to his privacy.
“Of his own volition, President Buhari
spoke with me. It made my day. Even if he hadn’t done so, he would have
remained my President, my leader, and my man. Any day.