The
relatively peaceful and tranquil atmosphere of the Presidential Villa is being
threatened by internal conflicts amongst its occupants, OLALEKAN ADETAYO
reports
The Presidential Villa, Abuja
serves as the office and residence of both the President and Vice President of
Nigeria. These two top government officials live in the ‘Aso Rock Villa,’ as it
is popularly known, with their families, aides and security agents assigned to
the villa.
While some of the aides live
in various buildings within the complex, others and their respective families
live with the President and Vice President in their official residences.
The
President’s official residence is tucked inside a compound between his office
and the office of the First Lady. The location makes the residence accessible
from the President’s office, the First Lady’s office and through the main gate
to the villa.
As visitors scale through the
security check at the gate and enter the premises, they will be facing the
President’s official residence directly, with a water fountain welcoming them.
On
the left hand side lays a building called the Glass House. Our correspondent
learnt that the building was originally intended to serve as a temporary means
of shelter for an outgoing President and his family, who are in the process of
vacating their official residence in order to give room for renovation, ahead
of his successor’s arrival.
Since the building cannot be
left unoccupied for the better part of a President’s tenure of four or eight
years, as the case may be, it is normal that it is put to use. Under former
President Goodluck Jonathan, a number of political meetings were held inside
that building in the night.
The same building was in the
news on Monday for what many Nigerians now describe as a ‘presidential
scuffle’. It all started when the wife of the President, Mrs Aisha
Buhari, who was away from the country for a while, based on her doctor’s
advice, returned to Nigeria in the early hours of Sunday and indicated that she
still needed some time to rest.
Those
who expected her to retire quietly into the comfort of her room in the Villa
were surprised to learn about a controversial interview she granted the Hausa
Service of the British Broadcasting
Corporation, in which she accused Fatima, daughter of her husband’s
nephew, Mamman Daura, of laughing at her because President Muhammadu Buhari
asked Daura and his family to vacate the Glass House for his son, Yusuf.
Believed to be one of the
powerful men behind the throne in the Presidency, Daura had been
occupying the building with his family, In spite of the fact that he does not
hold any public office.
Mrs
Buhari had said, “I was the one in the video. Those people behind me were the
security personnel assigned to protect me. But Mamman Daura’s daughter, Fatima,
shot the video in the presence of security officials and everybody. She was
laughing at me because my husband said they should vacate the place (Glass
House) for my son.
“I wanted to pass through that
door to go into a store, but they had locked the door. I took an
alternative route only to discover that the door was also locked.”
Fatima also granted the medium
a separate interview, admitting that she recorded the video that went viral to
provide proof for her parents and security officials about Mrs Buhari’s
outburst during the encounter.
She said, “Her comments
frightened me. She was hurling insults and shouting that she had never seen
anything like it. I went back and took my (mobile) phone because if you went
and said she acted the way she did, nobody would believe you (without
evidence).
“She was making a lot of
noise, saying she was being oppressed. I filmed the encounter to show our
parents and security officials, in case something happens. From the way she was
screaming, I even thought she would pick up something to hit us or something
like that.”
Those who have been observing
events in the Presidential Villa since the inception of this administration in 2015
will admit that Mrs Buhari is not afraid to speak up when the need arises and
whenever she is opportune to do so.
What readily comes to mind, in
this regard, is her 2016 interview with the BBC.
She had threatened to withdraw her support for the President at the 2019
general elections unless he made an effort to shake up his cabinet. At the
time, she claimed her husband did not know most of the top government officials
he had appointed.
She had said, “The President
does not know 45 out of 50 of the people he appointed. I don’t know them
either, despite being his wife of 27 years. Some people are sitting down in
their homes and folding their arms only to be invited to head a government
agency or take up a ministerial job.”
Although Mrs Buhari refused to
name those who had hijacked the government in the interview, many people looked
in the direction of Daura and the Chief of Staff to the President, Abba Kyari.
Both men are believed to be powerful forces behind the throne in the
Presidency.
Two years down the line, the
President’s wife again justified her statement, saying it was based on her
sense of justice. She said the statement was not meant to be confrontational or
a sign of disrespect.
In a message she sent to the
2017 Vanguard Awards where she was honoured as the Vanguard Personality of the
Year 2017, Mrs Buhari said she was brought up to stand by the truth and that
was how she had been living her life.
She explained that since
Nigerians elected her husband, based on the trust and confidence they had in
him, she felt the administration should serve the country to the best of
its ability.
She had said, “One of the
reasons adduced for honouring me was the interview I granted, which some people
saw as criticism of a government that I am part of.
“I need to state that my
position was a reflection of my sense of justice. It was not meant to confront
or disrespect the government. I was brought up to stand by the truth and this
is how I have always been.
“As we are all aware,
Nigerians elected this administration based on trust and the confidence they
have in my husband. Therefore, I feel that we are here to serve Nigeria to the
best of our ability.
“Let me use this opportunity
to state that I support my husband in this call to service and will continue to
do so.”
Whats is happening in aso rock oooo
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