I was really excited on Saturday when I
received news of the eventual visit of President Muhammadu Buhari’s
media team to him in London. I had always felt that the exclusion of the
media team from the London medical vacation and the various visits
practically undermined the Presidential media office, and created the
space for the mismanagement of the communication process around and
about the President’s illness.
I could never have imagined my own boss in
our time, travelling without me or shutting me out of any important
event. He took my team everywhere. Every President has what is called a
Main Body. This comprises his first line of assistants, namely his Chief
Security Officer, Aide-de-Camp, Chief Detail, Chief Physician, State
Chief of Protocol, Personal Assistant (Luggage), Personal Assistant
(Private matters), and of course, the Special Adviser (Media and
Publicity)/Official Spokesperson.
Whereas other parts of this body face
their own challenges, the major problem that the President’s media team
often faces is that everyone in the Presidency, and even persons from
outside, particularly the na-my-brother-dey-there crowd tend to
assume that they know a lot about the media. They probably have an
uncle who once worked as a journalist or newspaper vendor, or they
happen to know one or two editors or correspondents, who are perpetually
telling them how the media team is not doing what it is supposed to do.
While other parts of the President’s Main
Body are usually civil servants, the Chief Physician and the Special
Adviser (Media) are traditionally political appointees, and they are
easily the targets of so many people who want their positions. My then
colleague, the Chief Physician used to complain bitterly about how on
many occasions he had to warn self-appointed physicians who used to
recommend vitamins and other drugs for the President behind his back. In
the corridors of power, the jostling for power, territory, and space
could be psychologically crippling and emotionally corrosive.
I recall in particular, how in those days,
(indeed, yesterday is beginning to sound like those days!), some
persons used to draw attention to how the media is managed in the US
White House. After a while, I started asking them: “have you ever worked
in this White House, that you talk so eloquently about?” Now, we have
seen a different White House under President Donald Trump, and hence,
when I call up “the White House experts”, their only response these days
is that “it is not easy.” Of course, no part of Presidential work is
easy.
There is also no standard formula for
serving a President. No two presidencies are alike in any way. The
nature and character of an executive Presidency is determined by the
style/temperament/competence/c hoices of the individual President
and the circumstances of his tenure, and it is these same factors that
account for the differences between great, mediocre and bad Presidents.
To each category, history is the eventual judge.
Nonetheless, I thought it was wrong to
have kept President Buhari’s team out of the London trips. The core team
should have been there all the time to take photographs, issue
statements, if needed, organize video recordings, liaise with local
journalists, and manage “inconvenient” journalism and public perception.
But what did we have? The various pictures taken of the President until
the visit by his media team, looked like photos taken by quacks. The
President was presented as if he was a statue, or at best, as a sick man
propped up for photographic effect. Nobody even paid attention to his
wardrobe.
I imagined that some characters would have
filled the gap left by the absence of the media team, and would have
been busy taking pictures with a miserable gadget, not knowing that
photos are meant to tell stories and that they are taken with the brain.
Whoever was behind that newspaper vendor style of journalism did the
President a disservice and was responsible for most of the damage that
was done. The real damage was that Nigerians did not believe the
official narrative, they concluded that the pictures were photo-shopped
or that they were old pictures and that there was an attempt to hoodwink
the public. It didn’t help that whoever took those early pictures
focused on the President’s weak points: his fingers and arms in a poor
pose, for example.
But the game changed the day Bayo
Omoboriowo accompanied seven governors to London to see the President.
With five pictures, the President’s official photographer showed him in
better light. The photographs presented him as a living being. Every
Presidential assistant is as important as the amount of access and
empowerment that he/she enjoys. Many Presidents undermine their media
team, as US President Trump has done. I consider the visit to London by
President Buhari’s media team, a form of rehabilitation, for the team
and for the office. The meaning of that visit was not lost on the team
either.
Alhaji Lai Mohammed, on his arrival at the
Abuja House, looked like he had been grinning about 100 metres away
before he met the President. When the President extended his hands for a
handshake, Alhaji Lai Mohammed did a Nigerian version of the
Cameroonian Bidoung challenge. He bowed close to 90 degrees. Even when
the President took another person’s hand, Lai Mohammed was still busy
bowing. When the President praised him, he grinned so much, I thought he
was going to prostrate! My brothers, Femi Adesina and Garba Shehu
didn’t bow, they stayed professional, but I have never seen both former
Presidents of the Nigerian Guild of Editors grin so enthusiastically!
Lauretta Onochie was probably the biggest
beneficiary of the visit. Considered by opposition activists a footnote
in the Presidency pretending to be a valuable attack dog, her inclusion
in that trip has elevated her relevance. She still has a lot to learn on
the job though, especially from the masters of the attack dog game in
Nigerian politics: the inimitable and talented Femi Fani-Kayode, the
grandmaster of this chivalric Order, Doyin Okupe, the senior warden of
rebuttals, Lai Mohammed, Ayodele Fayose, Reno Omokri, Lere Olayinka,
Deji Adeyanju, and Jude Ndukwe. Given the nature of Nigerian politics,
future Nigerian presidents will certainly need the services of these
dogged political fighters to complement the officialdom of Presidential
spokesmanship.
Lauretta Onochie has a lot to learn from
them, albeit she is doing much better than the pathetic play-safe crowd
in the Buhari team but the London recognition should further empower
her. Abike Dabiri-Erewa was also in London, curtseying with both legs
and hands; she was described in the reports as Senior Special Assistant
on Diaspora Matters, but I guess she was included in the team in her
professional right as a seasoned broadcast journalist. Bayo Omoboriowo,
the official photographer, was also in attendance and when it was his
turn to have a Presidential handshake, he grinned and shook so much he
almost staged an Olamide-inspired Wo-challenge. I hope he remembered to
inform the President that his wife had just been delivered of twins and
that being a father of twins has serious implications in Yorubaland!
Together, the team delivered a
professional reportage. Brilliant. Different. Good moment for the
Presidency’s Media Department. Whereas previous coverage before the
Governors’ visit showed the President in an unconvincing manner, his
media team has managed to show him in a three-dimensional frame. We saw
him sitting, standing, and walking. He shook hands. He talked. His
wardrobe was different. He appeared animated and alive. With that visit,
many doubts have been laid to rest through the power of media. We now
know that Buhari can talk. Dirty-minded persons may even stretch the
matter and imagine that our President has been engaging in “the other
room” skelewu in London. The media team has also managed to establish
that medication or not, Buhari remains in charge. He is still President
and he is not incapacitated.
In the kind of system that we run, there
cannot be two Presidents at a time. When you have a living and breathing
President, be he in Iceland or Antarctica, for whatever reason, he
remains the President. This, thus, creates a special problem for Acting
President Yemi Osinbajo. The combined interpretation of the to-ing and
froing to London to visit President Buhari is the impression that
whereas Acting President Osinbajo has an office, transmitted to him
constitutionally in the light of Section 145 of the 1999 Constitution,
he has neither the power nor the authority of that office, or he is not
being allowed to enjoy the full benefits of his legal status. This puts
Nigeria in a lurch, technically and pragmatically and let no one make
any bones about that.
What is worse is the declaration by the
media team that the President’s return now lies in the hands of his
doctors and he is resolved to obey their orders. It is tragic that
Nigeria’s sovereignty, which resides in part in the office of the
President, has been ceded to UK doctors. They alone can determine when
Nigeria can have its President back in the homeland. Saddening as that
situation is, not even the Queen of England or the British Prime
Minister has deemed it necessary to visit President Buhari or seek
audience with him.
This egregious insult is well-deserved by
Nigeria and other African countries whose leaders embark on medical
tourism to Europe, Asia and North America. The intelligence agencies in
these countries have all the strategic information on our leaders and
country, but we are happy to play third fiddle in global politics. In
2050, Nigeria’s population is likely to be over 300 million, with some
of the youngest people in the world being Nigerians. If by 2050, we do
not have enough good hospitals and medical facilities to take care of
our people, we would be a doomed nation.
This is not a task for Buhari’s media
team. But just as they tried to put out a fire in London, another had
already started at home. By the way, a Presidential media department is a
Fire Service office and an ambulance operation. There is always another
fire next time and victims in need of desperate rescue. In the present
instance, a group called “Our-mumu-don-do” group, led by Charly Boy, the
self-acclaimed Area Fada of Frustrated Nigerians had begun a protest in
Abuja asking President Buhari to resume office or resign.
They were echoing the protests of those
who have argued that the Nigerian electorate voted for a President not
an absentee one, that they voted in the expectation that their President
would stay in office and serve them, and did not expect that the
President would become an apparition or a London-based tourist and
museum attraction. Charly Boy, 66, went out with his pro-democracy
troops, but they were tear-gassed and harassed by the police. They were
accused of engaging in unlawful pro-corruption and irresponsible
activity that was hijacked by hoodlums. That of course is stupid talk.
At issue was the right of every Nigerian
to protest without being molested, and the right to free speech. When
free speech is denied, hate speech is encouraged. It is ironic that the
same government that is so concerned about hate speech is the same one
promoting it.
Meanwhile, sycophantic speech is
encouraged. To counter the Charly Boy group, someone organized a
pro-Buhari group, which has been busy dancing around Abuja proclaiming
that Buhari will win the 2019 election, denouncing those who want him to
resign. I have taken a look at this group and they look like a bunch of
hoodlums, every one of them, but they have so far enjoyed police
protection and the government is very happy with them. When government
gains one thing with one hand, some other characters remove it with
another hand. This is the sign of the times.
But there are unresolved questions that
will not go away just like that. For how long will the President remain
on medical vacation in London, even when the Constitution, the country’s
basic law, is silent and ambiguous on this score? What is the actual
cost of the President’s absence in a context that disallows the transfer
of power and authority in the presence of an apparently living and
said-to-be-capable President who is otherwise indisposed?
I’ll not ask that the visits to London be
stopped, in case that is part of the doctors’ therapy, but it is
ridiculous and insensitive that government officials are now visiting
the President in medical exile, with some of them posing for photo-ops
with their children. Our President should not be turned into a tourist
attraction and the Abuja House in London should not become a museum.
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