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Muhammadu Buhari obituary

Muhammadu Buhari obituary

The Guardian6 days ago
The soldier and politician Muhammadu Buhari, who has died aged 82, was both military dictator and, three decades later, democratically elected president of Nigeria. His reputation as a no-nonsense general gained him lasting popularity, but also much criticism, with charges of repression and human rights abuses, as well as failure to tackle the economy or jihadist terrorism.
His election in 2015 was notable for being the first to unseat an incumbent president, Goodluck Jonathan. However this success was also his fourth attempt. Buhari had secured millions of votes in the 2003, 2007 and 2011 elections, but fell short of the required voting margins partly because, as a Muslim from the north, who supported sharia law, he was unpopular in southern and central Nigeria.
He finally succeeded in 2015 by marketing himself as a 'reformed democrat' and appointing a top clergyman from the country's biggest Pentecostal megachurch, Yemi Osinbajo, as his deputy.
'I belong to everybody and I belong to nobody,' he said on his inauguration day, a quote that became his mantra.
At 72, he was also the oldest person elected to the office in Nigeria, and that set the pace of his presidency, earning him the nickname 'Baba Go Slow'. In his first term, the goodwill began to dissipate after he took five months to appoint a cabinet and reintroduced the same economic policies from his military days.
His 'hands-off' management style led to the view that others, in particular his nephews and chief of staff, were running the show. This was reinforced by a viral photo of Buhari picking his teeth in the presidential palace, and a 104-day absence on medical grounds in 2017, fuelling conspiracy theories that he had died and been replaced by a Sudanese body double.
During his two-term tenure, Nigeria faced some of its worst security crises since the Biafran war (1967-70). Boko Haram – which Buhari had promised to crush – abducted, displaced and killed thousands of civilians, and split, as one faction became the Islamic West Africa Province. Still, his government claimed the jihadists had been 'technically defeated'.
After the army shot peaceful protesters during anti-police brutality demonstrations in 2020 in Lagos, Buhari's national address days later ignored the killings entirely.
By the time he left office in 2023, Nigeria, then Africa's largest economy, had slumped to two recessions in eight years, despite there being none in the two decades before. The naira became one of the worst performing global currencies, forcing the central bank to try unorthodox measures.
One of those was cutting down trees in the capital Abuja so that streetside bureau de change operators would have no shade to do business under. Thousands of young people left the country in its biggest emigration wave in decades. Nevertheless, Buhari remained popular, especially in northern Nigeria, where many acknowledged the failure of his policies but blamed those around him.
Born in Daura, in northern Nigeria, he was the son of Adamu and Zulaiha Buhari. After school in Katsina, at 19 he joined the army, and underwent training in the UK, at Mons Officer Cadet School in Aldershot (1962-65). He was commissioned as a second lieutenant two years later and progressed through the ranks, serving as a minister in the military regime that ruled Nigeria from 1975 to 1979. His hardline character was spotted in April 1983 when, as a commanding officer of an armoured division, his troops pursued invading Chadian forces across the border disregarding orders by the then president Shehu Shagari. By 31 December, he had overthrown Shagari in a coup.
Buhari and his never-smiling deputy, Tunde Idiagbon, emphasised anti-corruption and discipline under a 'war against indiscipline' campaign, which manifested itself as authoritarianism, press suppression and human rights abuses. In April 1985, for instance, three men were executed by firing squad for drug offences instead of the maximum six-month jail term, after a new decree was retroactively applied.
Three months later came the 'Umaru Dikko affair': the attempted kidnapping of a former minister in London using a crate uncovered by British customs officials at Heathrow airport, which led to a breakdown in diplomatic relations between Nigeria and the UK. In August 1985 Buhari was ousted from office by another junta. He spent three years under house arrest, then led a relatively quiet life until democracy was restored in Nigeria in 2003, and he began his presidential campaigns.
Following his 2011 election loss, Buhari said in a speech: 'If what happened in 2011 should happen again in 2015, by the grace of God, the dog and the baboon would all be soaked in blood.'
The remarks caused alarm given that post-election violence had already led to the deaths of more than 800 people. But his supporters framed it as a metaphor for resistance to electoral malpractice.
In 2019, the popular Nigerian newspaper the Punch announced in an editorial that it would prefix Buhari's name with his military rank and refer to his administration as a 'regime' to protest about the government's 'serial disregard for human rights, court orders, and the battering of other arms of government and Nigeria's democratic institutions'.
Buhari's spokesperson responded by saying that as he had earned the rank, the newspaper was free to use it, a 'testimony to press freedom in Nigeria'.
After stepping down in 2023, Buhari confined himself mostly to his Daura home until he arrived in London for medical care.
His first marriage, to Safinatu Yusuf, in 1971, ended in divorce. Buhari is survived by his second wife, Aisha (nee Halilu), whom he married in 1989, their son and four daughters, and three daughters from his first marriage (another daughter from that marriage predeceased him).
Muhammadu Buhari, soldier and politician, born 17 December 1942; died 13 July 2025
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Congo and rebels have committed to ending war in the east. Here's what to know
Congo and rebels have committed to ending war in the east. Here's what to know

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

Congo and rebels have committed to ending war in the east. Here's what to know

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The world's oldest president is running again: can anyone stop him from winning?
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The world's oldest president is running again: can anyone stop him from winning?

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Nigeria Senate describe reports of approving creation of 31 new states as fake news
Nigeria Senate describe reports of approving creation of 31 new states as fake news

BBC News

time3 hours ago

  • BBC News

Nigeria Senate describe reports of approving creation of 31 new states as fake news

Nigeria National Assembly don describe tori wey dey spread say lawmakers don approve di creation of 31 new states for Nigeria as fake news. Tok-tok pesin for di Senate, Yemi Adaramodu tell BBC News Pidgin say di "National Assembly alone no fit create states for Nigeria, plus di proposal go pass through various stages of constitutional amendments, wey include further public hearings". Di proposal for state creation must also get di approval of two-third majority of di number of states houses of assembly. "Na thorough process," senator Adaramodu add. BBC News Pidgin seek oga Adaramodu response afta we spot tori wey pipo don share plenty times on WhatsApp wia dem claim say di Senate don give green light for di creation of di 31 new states. Na for February 2025, di House of Representatives committee on constitutional review tok say dem receive proposals for di creation of 31 new states for di federation. Chairman of di committee, Benjamin Kalu propose say make dem create six new states for North Central, four for North East, five for North West, five for South East, four for South-South and seven for South West. If di National Assembly approve dis proposal, Nigeria go get 67 wey go big pass di 50 states wey America get. Wen di process go conclude neva dey clear, as senator Adaramodu tok say na long process wey involve various stages of constitutional amendments. Wetin Nigeria constitution tok on state creation Section eight of di Nigeria constitution make provision for how to create a new state for di kontri. First, di request for new state go dey supported by at least two-thirds majority of members wey dey represent di area demanding di new State for di National Assembly (both Senate and House of Reps), di State House of Assembly of di area, and di local goment councils of di area. Den di proposal for creation of state go enta referendum - voting - wia at least two-thirds majority of di people for di area go vote in support or against di demand for creation of di State. Afta dat, di result of di referendum go dey approved by a simple majority of all di states of di federation supported by a simple majority of members of State Houses of Assembly. Di last step na for di proposal to dey approved by a resolution passed by two-thirds majority of members of each of di Senate and House of Representatives. Breakdown of di proposed states NORTH-CENTRAL BENUE ALA STATE from Benue State. OKUN STATE from Kogi State OKURA STATE from Kogi State CONFLUENCE STATE from Kogi State APA-AGBA STATE from Benue South Senatorial District APA STATE from Benue State. A 37th state, wey dem go name FEDERAL CAPITAL TERRITORY, ABUJA NORTH-EAST AMANA STATE from Adamawa State. KATAGUM STATE from Bauchi State. SAVANNAH STATE from Borno State. MURI STATE from Taraba State. NORTH-WEST NEW KADUNA STATE and GURARA STATE from Kaduna State. TIGA STATE from Kano State. KAINJI STATE from Kebbi State. GHARI STATE from Kano State SOUTH-EAST ETITI STATE go be di sixth state for di South East geopolitical zone. ADADA STATE from Enugu State. URASHI STATE from South East geopolitical zone. ORLU STATE from di South Eastern Region of Nigeria. ABA STATE from the South Eastern Region of Nigeria. SOUTH-SOUTH OGOJA STATE from Cross River State. WARRI STATE from Delta State. BORI STATE from Rivers State. OBOLO STATE from Rivers and Akwa Ibom States. SOUTH-WEST TORU-EBE STATE from Delta, Edo, and Ondo States. IBADAN STATE from Oyo State. LAGOON STATE from Lagos State. IJEBU STATE from Ogun State. OKE-OGUN from Ogun State IFE-IJESHA from Oyo, and Osun states. Nigeria need more states? Di simple answer na "no we no need more states", according to Dr Bello Maisudan, a lecturer for di Department of Political Science for Bayero University, Kano. Oga Maisudan explain say state creation suppose dey based on four things: demand, population, land size, and self sufficiency. On demand, Maisudan tok say pipo fit call for a new state maybe bicos of percived marginalisation by a majority ethnic group or inter-ethnic conflicts. Examples according to am na Nasarawa State wey dem create out of Plateau State and Bayelsa wey come out of Rivers State. Also, di size of di land by area as well as di population of a place na anoda tin to consider bifor creating a new state. Of course, di proposed new states, if created, suppose dey able to sustain itself and not to dey rely on federal allocation. "If you consider dis four factors, you go agree wit me say we no need new states. Even di 36 states wey we get now, how many of dem meet di criteria, especially di ability to sustain diasef witout di support of di federal goment?" Dr Maisudan ask. "In my opinion, if new states go dey created, e no suppose dey more dan five more, considering oda factors such as population and di complain of marginalisation of small ethnic groups by di majority ones." Oga Maisudan say even though some benefits dey from creating more states, di disadvantages pass di advantages. Some of di disadvantages according to am na e go add more to di cost of governance especially bicos some of di existing states need support from di federal goment to sustain diasef. Anoda one be say, e fit increase di agitation for separation from di kontri.

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