L-R: Senate President Bukola Saraki, President Muhammadu
Buhari and Speaker of House of Representatives Yakubu Dogara at the Abuja,
London on Thursday, August 17, 2017. PHOTO: TWITTER/NIGERIAN PRESIDENCY
By Tonye Bakare, Online Editor
Ailing Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari’s return to the
country from London where he is receiving medical treatment for an undisclosed
ailment is imminent, the president of the country’s senate said on Thursday.
“It is clear that Mr President’s insistence on following his
doctors’ advice has yielded the desired results,” Saraki said.
“I therefore confidently look forward to Mr President’s
imminent return home.”
Senate President Bukola Saraki and the speaker of House of
Representatives Yakubu Dogara were the latest Nigerian public officials to meet
Buhari in London. Last week the president received a team of his media aides
including Nigeria’s information minister Lai Mohammed, spokesmen Femi Adesina
and Garba Shehu, and his personal assistant on social media Lauretta Onochie
and senior adviser on foreign affairs and diaspora Abike Dabiri-Erewa.
Buhari has spent more than 100 days in London having left
Nigeria on May 7, transferring power to Vice President Yemi Osinbajo.
His absence from the country has spun a few yet sustained
protests in the Nigerian capital city Abuja. Counter protests by groups loyal
to the president have also been held. Face offs between the two groups have
resulted in violence.
On Tuesday, singer and media personality Charles ‘Charly
Boy’ Oputa, led a modest rally of around a dozen of his followers into the
city’s sprawling Wuse market.
They were however attacked by traders from the president’s
own Hausa ethnic group, pelted with stones and chased out of the market —
leaving behind Oputa’s BMW convertible in the chaos, AFP reported.
A Guardian reporter Dare Richards was also attacked by the
pro-Buhari crowd.
But Saraki’s statement after meeting with Buhari on Thursday
suggested the protest may not need to hold for long as the president is due to
return home soon.
He said Buhari was abreast of the goings-on in Nigeria and
that the meeting with the 74-year old leader was “of substance where we
discussed important matters of state” including the 2017 budget.
“In particular, we talked about the virement request by the
Presidency which is before the National Assembly,” said the Senate president.
“We then considered the steps to be taken in the preparation
of the 2018 budget to ensure its early passage.”