Ailing President Buhari abroad leaves Nigeria with sense of Deja vu.
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A president who’s flown abroad to seek medical treatment and given no firm date for his return: Nigeria has been here before.
Muhammadu Buhari, 74, traveled to the U.K. on Jan. 19 for medical tests
and was due back on Feb. 5. He’s yet to return and hasn’t appeared or
spoken in public for more than three weeks after asking lawmakers for
medical leave.
On Monday, he talked by phone with U.S. President
Donald Trump, giving cheer to his supporters that he’s not as ill as
widely speculated. Yet his absence is heightening concern about
government paralysis at a time when the economy is in recession and the
stock market is sliding.
For many Nigerians the situation recalls
former President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua’s time in office. Like Buhari,
Yar’Adua was a northern Muslim with a southern Christian vice president
in a country with often sharp sectarian divisions.
Yar’Adua was
flown in November 2009 to Saudi Arabia for treatment of a heart
condition. It took about three months for the legislature to appoint
then-Vice President Goodluck Jonathan acting president, as Yar’Adua
associates sought to cover up the severity of his condition.
Yar’Adua eventually died in office on May 5, 2010. Unlike Yar’Adua,
Buhari formally transferred power to his vice president, Yemi Osinbajo,
before departing.
“The experience of 2010 still hangs over Nigeria,”
Antony Goldman, head of London-based PM Consulting, said by phone from
London. “Partly as a result of that the government has undertaken all
the efforts to do what wasn’t done in 2010.”
Under the constitution, if Buhari can’t continue in office, Osinbajo would become president and he would choose a new deputy.
Political Jockeying
That’s not stemmed rumors of politicians jockeying for position to
succeed Buhari, a former military ruler. The presidency has only said
that Buhari is undergoing medical checks and has declined to disclose
further information about his condition.
On Monday, Buhari spoke to
Trump about the need for more equipment to deal with one of the worst
crises the nation is facing -- the fight against the Islamist militant
group Boko Haram in the northeast where thousands of people have been
killed, more than 2 million have fled their homes and the United Nations
is warning of a widespread humanitarian crisis.
Buhari is facing a
raft of additional challenges. Even as the central bank holds the naira
around 315 per dollar on the official market, it’s tumbled to a record
low of 507 on the black market amid a dearth of foreign investment and
as shortages of foreign-exchange mount.
Gasoline prices that were to
be slashed by two-thirds have risen about 67 percent since he took
office. Africa’s second-biggest economy likely had its first full-year
contraction in a quarter-century in 2016, while inflation is at an
11-year high.
Stocks Fall
Since his departure, Nigerian stocks
have fallen 4.5 percent to a nine-month low. They’ve dropped 6.9 percent
this year, the world’s worst performance among 96 primary indexes
tracked by Bloomberg.
“The concern may be the effectiveness of
government,” said Olusegun Sotola, senior researcher at the Initiative
of Public Policy Analysis in Lagos. “Constitutionally, Osinbajo can do
almost anything, but it may be another thing in practice.”
SOURCE: https://www.facebook.com/nhyira104.5fm/posts/1305753959468371
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