Buhari’s Health: Nobody has Pressured Osinbajo to Resign – Presidency

Thu, Jan 26, 2017
By publisher
3 MIN READ

BREAKING NEWS, Politics

– 

… FG to punish rumour mongers, says Lai Mohammed

THE Presidency has rejected speculations that Acting President, Yemi Osinbajo was being held hostage and pressured to resign his office by some state governors. The insinuation has been rife following the rumoured death of President Muhammadu Buhari who took leave to see his doctors for medical attention in London, United Kingdom last week.

Reacting to the matter in a tacit statement titled “State of the Nation,” the Special Adviser to the president on Political Affairs in the office of the Vice President, Femi Ojudu in Abuja on Wednesday said there was no truth in the matter, saying it was entirely false. He said that Osinbajo was busy yesterday attending to visitors after presiding over the Federal Executive Council, FEC.

Ojudu stated: “I have read many ridiculous stories saying the Vice President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo is being held hostage by some governors who are trying to compel him to resign. “I have equally received several calls regarding this. The story is simply not true. It is a fabrication. Don’t be a purveyor of fake news. The Vice President is behind his desk carrying out his task. The Federal Executive Council presided over by him has just ended and he has been busy receiving visitors and holding meetings.”

Meanwhile, the Federal Government says the full wrath of the law will be brought to bear on the authors of subversive messages being circulated on the health of President Muhammadu Buhari. The government said this in a statement issued on Wednesday in Abuja by the Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed. “The source/sources of the fabricated messages are already being investigated and the authors should prepare to face the consequences of their actions,’’ the minister said.

According to Mohammed, the President is hale and hearty and there is no iota of truth in the subversive messages being circulated on his health. He noted that there was no truth in the messages on the President’s health and the purported emergency meetings of state governors in Abuja or anywhere.

The minister urged Nigerians to disregard the messages being circulated via text messages and the social media, saying the messages were orchestrated by those who felt threatened by the emerging order. Mohammed noted that the naysayers had also resorted to the use of ethnicity and religion as tools to divide Nigerians, overheat the polity, and cause panic among the citizenry.

“While opposition and criticism are all part of democracy, the crafting and circulation of subversive materials and scare-mongering are not. The emerging trend of resorting to destabilisation and scare-mongering is not unexpected, considering this government’s clamp-down on the corrupt elements in the society.”

The minister said the scare mongering was because government had blocked all financial leaks, enthroned probity and transparency and derailed the gravy train of the looters of public treasury. Mohammed said government would neither stifle press freedom nor abridge the citizens’ right to express themselves freely through constructive criticism or protests. He, however, warned that “the security agencies will neither allow any resort to violence nor a wilful subversion of the state for whatever reason’’. – NAN

— Jan 26, 2017 @ 14:58 GMT

|

Tags: