Why Buhari travels abroad for medical treatment – Presidency

Fri, Nov 3, 2017 | By publisher


Health

 

THE Presidency has stated that President Muhammadu Buhari never made a promise to Nigerians in 2015 that he would not seek medical treatment abroad if elected.

Femi Adesina, special adviser to the president on Media and Publicity, said this on Thursday, November 2, while speaking as a guest on Focus Nigeria, a programme on Africa Independent Television, AIT.

Bolaji Abdullahi, the spokesman of the All Progressives Congress, APC, who appeared alongside Adesina, also said the much talked about promise the president allegedly made was false. Abdullahi said: “I was the deputy director of the policy directorate of the campaign; I was there from the beginning to the end.

“So many people came to join the group, some from even outside the country. One day, we were in a meeting, then one gentleman who heads one of the international NGOs in the country brought this list of 100 items that he was proposing that we should push out as the promise of Mr. President to Nigerians.

“We circulated and asked everyone to study it and come back the following day so that we look at which ones we can own and which ones we need to reject.

“I remember that number 1 on that list was to make the president say that ‘When I become president, I will not travel abroad for medical treatment’. And I remember we rejected that immediately, because we said we didn’t know what this man was dealing with; we didn’t know who his doctors had been, how could we say this for him?

“But you know what happened? One of us in the group just released the document.”

Adesina echoed Abdullahi’s claim, confirming that the president was never aware of any such promise, let alone agreed to it. He said: “I can confirm that even the president himself, who was a candidate then, was not aware. The very week I resumed this assignment, I raised some things with the president. I said, this and this and this were promised, and the president said ‘When did I promise these things?’

“I said there is a document titled ‘100 things Buhari will do in 100 days’. He never knew about that document. He had to ask people to fetch that document for him, and it was the first time he was seeing it.

“So there were promises that people made during the campaign on his behalf.”

In any case, Adesina blamed the past administrations of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP,  for the poor state of healthcare in the country. He said the situation was a major reason for the president’s medical trips abroad.

According to him, “There was a time we could have afforded it, but the money was not properly spent. That’s why the president keeps lamenting that for a certain number of years consistently, oil prices stood at $100 per barrel, going as high as $120 per barrel at a time, and we were producing about 2.1 million barrels daily.

“Then when he (Buhari) came, oil prices plunged to $37 per barrel, so he called the Central Bank governor and said, ‘Do we have savings?’ and the governor said ‘No savings.’

“The question is, ‘What did they do with that money? Why didn’t they fix our hospitals in all those years that we had boom?’

“And you know that since 2015, things have been down and they are just looking up now. As things look up, if they ever, ever get back to where we were, if we ever get back to $100 per barrel for oil under the Buhari administration, it’s doubtful.

“But if we ever get there, you can be sure that a lot will get done, because this is a prudent administration and the money of Nigerians will be used to serve Nigerians.”

Buhari has made two foreign trips to London this year alone to seek treatment for an undisclosed illness.

He once spent 103 days in London on a medical vacation, which caused public outrage and demand for his resignation from office.

 

– Nov 3, 2017 @ 15:09 GMT |

 

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