Tag: BUHARI

  • Tinubu to receive Buhari’s remains in Katsina

    Tinubu to receive Buhari’s remains in Katsina

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu will personally receive the remains of his predecessor Muhammadu Buhari in Katsina, The Nation has learnt.

    Tinubu also constituted an 18 member Inter-Ministerial Committee to oversee the State burial for Buhari.

    The Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Senator George Akume will chair the committee.

    Buhari, who died in a London Clinic on Sunday, is expected to be buried on Tuesday July 15, in Daura, Katsina State.

    Vice President, Kashim Shettima is already in London to conclude documentation and logistical arrangements for the repatriation of the former President’s remains.

    The remains of the former president is expected to arrive in Katsina by 12: noon on Tuesday.

    The Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris said “President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, will personally receive the remains of the former President in Katsina.

    “The remains will thereafter proceed to Daura, where the Jana’iza (funeral prayer) will take place, followed by interment at the late President’s residence.”

    On the 18 member inter-ministerial committee, he said it is meant to ensure a dignified Burial for the late President.

    “To ensure a dignified and well-coordinated programme, the President has constituted an Inter-Ministerial Committee to oversee the State Burial, in collaboration with the Katsina State Government and the family of the former President.

    “Other members of the committee are: Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy; Minister of Budget and Economic Planning; Minister of Defence; Minister of Information and National Orientation; Minister of Works; Minister of Interior; Minister of FCT; Minister of Housing and Urban Development; Minister of State for Health and Social Welfare; Minister of Art, Culture and Creative Economy; National Security Adviser; Special Adviser to the President on Policy and Coordination; Senior Special Assistant to the President on Political and Other Matters; Inspector General of Police; Director-General, Department of State Services (DSS); Chief of Defence Staff.

    Read Also: How Buhari and I were admitted in same UK hospital before his death, by Abdulsalami

    The Office of the Permanent Secretary, General Services Office (GSO), will serve as the Secretariat to the Committee.

    Twenty-five members of the Federal Executive Council, according to the Minister, have been directed to proceed to Katsina to participate in the full schedule of the burial rites and remain for the Third-Day Prayers in Daura on Wednesday, 16th July, 2025.

    He also announced the postponement of the earlier scheduled special FEC meeting.

    The meeting, which was scheduled for Tuesday July 15, 2025 will now come up on July 18, 2025.

    The Minister also urged Nigerians to join in prayers.

    There will also be a Military Ceremony and Jana’iza in Daura.

    The Minister said there will be a brief military ceremony at the Katsina airport on arrival of the body in Katsina

    The Minister also informed Tinubu has ordered for the opening of condolence registers in all ministries, Departments and Agencies.

    Additional registers are also to open at the Bola Ahmed Tinubu International Conference Centre in Abuja, as well as at Nigerian Embassies and Missions abroad.

  • We’ve lost a patriot, Onjeh mourns Buhari

    We’ve lost a patriot, Onjeh mourns Buhari

    The former All Progressives Congress(APC) Benue South senatorial candidate Comrade Daniel Onjeh has joined millions of Nigerians to mourn former President Muhammadu Buhari who died on Sunday afternoon in a London clinic. 

    He said Bihari was not merely a leader but also a towering symbol of resilience, integrity, and unwavering commitment to Nigeria’s progress. 

    He expressed his grief in a statement on Sunday, July 13, 2025.

    “President Buhari’s death,” Onjeh emphasised, “is a painful moment for the nation, but his life and legacy will forever inspire generations.”

    Onjeh stated that as someone who had the honour of working closely with the late President first as his National Youth Campaign Director ( 2014) in the run up to the 2015 General Elections and as the Chairman of the Governing Board of PRODA, Enugu, he could attest to Buhari’s sincerity, discipline, and unrelenting war against corruption, describing him as an epitome of integrity. 

    “President Buhari was a man who fought with every fibre of his being to rid Nigeria of corruption,” he recalled. 

    “Even when the system resisted, he did not flinch—he stood firm, guided by his conscience and loyalty to Nigeria.” 

    He added that Buhari’s crusade against graft was not mere rhetoric; it was a mission he pursued with conviction and clarity of purpose.

    However, Onjeh observed that President Buhari’s war against corruption was met with fierce resistance from entrenched interests and a deeply compromised bureaucracy. 

    “As Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala noted in her book, _Fighting Corruption is Dangerous: The Story Behind The Headlines_, corruption fights back. It fought back even dirtier in Buhari’s time,” Onjeh lamented. 

    “While he had the political will, the sheer weight of institutional rot sometimes overwhelmed his efforts. His complete trust in subordinates—though a mark of his character—was often betrayed. And while a leader must ultimately take responsibility, many of the lapses witnessed during his administration stemmed from sabotage by those he trusted to act with integrity.”

    He added that this betrayal was worsened by the toll of Buhari’s prolonged ill health at the onset of his administration, which significantly affected the latter part of his administration. 

    Read Also: Alebiosu extols Awujale, Buhari’s legacies 

     “Some individuals took advantage of his medical condition to hijack the system and mismanage the nation,” Onjeh noted. 

    “This betrayal did not diminish the values he stood for—but it did frustrate their full expression.”

    Citing his experience, Onjeh recounted how he personally witnessed the dynamics of this systemic sabotage when he served as Chairman of the Governing Board of the Projects Development Institute (PRODA), Enugu, during Buhari’s administration.

     “Leading the Board of PRODA, in 2020, I made a formal recommendation to President Buhari to restructure the agency and reposition it to achieve its core mandate. 

    “One of the main recommendations was the removal of one of the agency’s top brass over weighty allegations of corruption and administrative malfeasance. President Buhari, in his characteristic decisiveness, approved all my recommendations without leaving any,” Onjeh revealed.

    “However,” Onjeh continued, “his directives were undermined by some of his subordinates at the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federal, within the Ministry of Science and Technology, and some powerful interests in the political class. 

    “Not only were the presidential directives subverted, but in retaliation, these corrupt forces also fought to manipulatively include a clause (that was never part of the President’s approval) in the presidential directive asking me to step aside from chairmanship of the agency’s Board, in the process making it seem like the hunter became the hunted. This was never part of President Buhari’s instructions. The original, signed copies of the President’s approval are available for public scrutiny. Corruption fought back against me, and it fought dirtier than I ever imagined.”

    Onjeh emphasised that this experience reflected the broader systemic flaw in Nigeria’s governance architecture.

     “Not even a saint can change Nigeria—not until we address the root problem,” he declared. “In all developed nations, reforms succeeded because citizens, not just presidents and the political class took the anti-corruption battle seriously. In such nations, institutions—not personalities—guarantee performance. Even the worst leaders are compelled to govern responsibly because the systems and institutions are structured to work regardless of who is in power.”

    He asserted that Nigeria’s primary challenge is not just political leadership at the top but the rot within the bureaucracy.

     “We focus our anti graft fight too much on high-profile office holders, sometimes weaponising it to witch hunt political opponents not in the interest of the nation, but it’s actually the public and civil servants—those in ministries, departments, and agencies—who are the real interface between government, the people, and the environment. These are the people driving and implementing government policies. If they fail, the government fails woefully,” Onjeh said.

    “Many agencies today are hotbeds of corruption. Some high-level politicians collude with heads of MDAs to siphon public funds. So, unless any president is ready to fumigate the civil service and MDAs—to cleanse and replace compromised officials with patriotic technocrats—the nation will remain trapped in mediocrity however well-intentioned the leadership may be.”

    Turning his reflection back to President Buhari, Onjeh noted that as a decorated military officer, Buhari first served as Nigeria’s Head of State from 1983 to 1985, during which he earned a reputation for discipline and upright governance through his celebrated ‘War Against Indiscipline’ campaign.

    Onjeh noted that during Buhari’s two-term presidency (2015–2023), he confronted Nigeria’s pressing challenges with uncommon determination. 

    “He implemented the Whistleblower Program, which led to the recovery of billions of naira and the prosecution of high-profile offenders.

    ” His administration invested massively in infrastructure—roads, rail, airports—transforming the economic landscape. In the face of persistent insecurity, particularly in the North-East, he significantly degraded Boko Haram’s control and facilitated the release of some abducted Chibok girls,” Onjeh recounted.

    He noted that Buhari’s government also weathered major global crises like the COVID-19 pandemic and oil price crashes, yet launched the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP), which helped stabilise Nigeria’s economy and revive agriculture. He also recalled the signing of the “Not Too Young to Run” bill, opening the political space to Nigerian youth. “President Buhari believed in the youth. That gesture alone was a bold statement about his progressive mindset,” Onjeh said.

    Reflecting on the late president’s character, Onjeh argued that Buhari was often misunderstood. “Some called him slow or aloof. But those of us who understood him knew he was a deliberate and principled man. He believed in due process and abhorred shortcuts. His governance was guided by the rule of law, even when it was politically inconvenient,” Onjeh said. “His declaration—‘I belong to nobody, and I belong to everybody’—was not just a slogan; it was a philosophy of impartiality and unity.”

    Onjeh concluded by emphasising that Buhari’s legacy should compel Nigerians to look inward. 

    “What Buhari represented—discipline, integrity, and moral clarity—may not have been fully realised because the system was broken. The failure was not personal—it was institutional,” he said.

     “Even if you bring the best president from any developed country around the globe and ask them to operate under Nigeria’s current system, the outcome will still be dismal.”

    “President Buhari’s death is a monumental loss, not just for Nigeria,” Onjeh said, “but for all who value upright leadership in public service.” To his wife, Aisha Buhari, his children, and the entire family, Onjeh extended heartfelt condolences. He also called on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and all Nigerians to unite in honouring the memory of this extraordinary man.

    “As we reflect on his life, let us remember his iconic words: ‘If we don’t kill corruption, corruption will kill Nigeria.’ His life was a bold declaration against impunity. We must carry that legacy forward.”

    “Rest in peace, _sai mai gaskiya_, Baba Buhari,” Onjeh concluded. “Your fight was ours, and we will carry it on.”

  • Buhari displayed zero tolerance for corruption – Ondo APC mourns 

    Buhari displayed zero tolerance for corruption – Ondo APC mourns 

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Ondo State has expressed deep sorrow over the passing of former President Muhammadu Buhari, saying he ‘displayed zero tolerance for corruption’ while in power. 

    Buhari, who ruled Nigeria earlier as a military Head of State from 1983 to 1985 and later as civilian President from 2015 to 2023, passed away on Sunday noon at a clinic in London. 

    His death was announced by his longtime aide and spokesperson, Garba Shehu, in a statement released on Sunday. 

    Buhari’s remains would be committed to mother earth on Tuesday in his hometown of Daura, Katsina State.

    READ ALSO: Buhari’s last public appearances

    In a statement signed by the party’s state spokesperson, Alex Kalejaye, and released to newsmen in Akure, the APC described late President Buhari as a firm leader with uncommon knack for probity and accountability. 

    The ruling party added that the former Nigeria leader also demonstrated his firmness both as a military general and a towering political figure.

    “Buhari displayed zero tolerance for corruption, and disdain for lavish lifestyle throughout his life time. These reflected in his leadership.

    “His contributions to the unity of Nigeria, and restoration and sustenance of democracy can not be overemphasized. He was genuinely committed to the physical and economic development of Nigeria.

    “Our thoughts and prayers are that the Almighty Allah will overlook his errors and console the families he left behind. May the soul of our departed leader find peace,” the statement read. 

  • Alebiosu extols Awujale, Buhari’s legacies 

    Alebiosu extols Awujale, Buhari’s legacies 

    The Chairman of the Council of Otunbas of Ijebu-land, Otunba Busura Alebiosu, has paid a glowing tribute to the late Awujale and Paramount Ruler of Ijebu-land, Oba Sikiru Kayode Adetona, Ogbagba II, and to former President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Otunba Alebiosu described the late monarch as a symbol of royalty, dignity, courage, and wisdom whose reign redefined the modern traditional institution in Nigeria.

    In a solemn statement issued on behalf of the Council following the monarch’s passing, he said: “The Awujale was not just a king to the Ijebus, he was the soul of a people, the custodian of our heritage, and a global icon of integrity. His long and impactful reign, marked by fearlessness, intellect, and modernization, will remain an inspiration to generations unborn.”

    Otunba Alebiosu commiserated with all Ijebu sons and daughters across the world, saying the vacuum left by Oba Adetona’s transition is immense.

    “We are consoled by the indelible legacy he leaves behind one of service, truth, and unflinching patriotism. I urge every Ijebu man and woman to honour his memory by living out the values he cherished.”

    READ ALSO: Buhari’s last public appearances

    The Chairman also extended heartfelt condolences to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu over the passing of former President Buhari, describing him as a statesman whose contributions to Nigeria’s democratic journey, national security, and infrastructural development will remain enduring.

    He added that Buhari’s passing is not only a great loss to Nigeria but also to all who cherish peace, stability, and progress across the world.

    Otunba Alebiosu prayed for strength and wisdom for President Tinubu during this double moment of national grief and urged Nigerians to unite in sober reflection and collective prayer.

    He urged the Ijebu people and Nigerians as a whole to remain resilient, emphasising that they should draw strength from their shared history and continue to move forward with the courage exemplified by their departed leaders.

  • How Buhari saved Nigeria from P&ID, Mambila troubles, by AGF Fagbemi 

    How Buhari saved Nigeria from P&ID, Mambila troubles, by AGF Fagbemi 

    The Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister of Justice, Lateef Fagbemi, (SAN) has recalled many contributions of the late ex-President Muhammadu Buhari to country’s growth and development.

    Fagbemi, who noted Buhari’s efforts in how the country escaped the P&ID fraud and the Mambila Hydroelectric Power Project legal dispute, said the deceased made significant strides in strengthening the administration of justice and advancing law reform. 

    In a statement issued on Monday, Fagbemi said Buhari’s death marks the end of an era in Nigeria’s political and moral history. 

    The statement reads: “I join His Excellency, President Bola Tinubu and all people of goodwill across our nation and beyond in mourning this profound national loss. 

    “The passing of former President Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR, marks the end of an era in Nigeria’s political and moral history. 

    “He will be remembered with profound respect for his unwavering dedication to God and country — a man of austere values, gentle strength, unyielding integrity, and a life defined by principled service in the quest for national transformation.

    “As President, the late Muhammadu Buhari made significant strides in strengthening the administration of justice and advancing law reform. 

    READ ALSO: Buhari’s last public appearances

    “His tenure witnessed the enactment of landmark statutes, bold policy initiatives, and far-reaching institutional reforms.

    “These included the modernization of correctional services, policing, anti-money laundering frameworks, asset recovery systems, federalism through the devolution of powers, electoral reform and the deepening of good governance.

    “It was under the leadership of former President Muhammadu Buhari that Nigeria initiated the successful challenge to the $11 billion P&ID arbitral award. 

    “That bold and strategic effort was steadfastly carried forward by President Bola Tinubu, ultimately enabling our nation to avert a crippling financial burden. 

    “Even in retirement, his unwavering sense of duty to the nation never diminished. 

    “I vividly recall visiting him in both London and Daura when his support was once again sought to help Nigeria confront another predatory claim — this time concerning the Mambila Hydroelectric Power Project.

    “Despite the demands of age and the comfort of private life, former President Buhari selflessly agreed to serve as a witness. 

    “In January 2025, he travelled to Paris and stood before the tribunal, bearing testimony for the country he loved with rare and steadfast conviction.

    “I extend my heartfelt condolences to His Excellency President Tinubu, to the former First Lady, Mrs. Aisha Buhari, and to the family, friends and close associates of our dearly departed leader. 

    “Nigeria has lost a titan of principle and purpose. May his soul find eternal rest.”

  • Buhari put country first – NLC mourns ex-president 

    Buhari put country first – NLC mourns ex-president 

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has joined Nigerians to mourn former President Muhammadu Buhari who passed away in a London Clinic on Sunday. 

    Buhari was 82.

    In a statement signed by its President, Joe Ajaero, the congress said that the late Nigerian lesleader gave his best to a country he strongly felt was in a state of disrepair.

    The NLC also the late Buhari consistently identified with worker-issues/values including resisting pressure to adopt fundamentalist market policies as part of the process of protecting workers and ordinary people.

    The statement said, “We are deeply saddened by the news of the passing away of our former President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari in a London hospital at the age of 82.

    “Our hearts are with the immediate family, friends and associates in these trying moments, especially his activist wife, Hajiya Aisha.

    READ ALSO: Buhari’s last public appearances

    “We must admit, his death has come as a surprise even as his first term was marked by long spells in hospital. But he emerged from it all strong and impregnable. Even out of office, his ramrod frame and long measured strides in or out of his farm were thought to be eloquent testimony of his good health. But we are all mortal.

    “Buhari gave his best to a country he strongly felt was in a state of disrepair. He had two chances to fix the country. First, as a young angry military general and second, as a conciliatory civilian president with a fatherly disposition. What the results were are entirely left to history and the individual.

    “Whatever those verdicts might be, it is near-unanimous that Buhari was associated with a single-mindedness of purpose (which some ascribed to stubborness); and protecting the sovereignty and dignity of Nigeria (as he understood it).

    “For us in the unions, Buhari came fighting the unions and mass-retrenching workers leading to indescribable suffering during his tenure as a military head of state.

    “However, as a civilian president, Buhari saw to it no worker was laid off (not even during the Covid-19 pandemic). He repeatedly gave facilities to state governments to clear the backlogs of salaries and pensions as well as to enable them to regularly pay salaries (although some governors betrayed this trust).

    “Although Buhari increased the pump-price of petroleum products, he stoutly refused to sell off the refineries or devalued the Naira. Buhari consistently identified with worker-issues/values including resisting pressure to adopt fundamentalist market policies as part of the process of protecting workers and ordinary people.

    “In the late President therefore we have lost a leader who corrected his mistakes against workers, during his second coming; who stood with the people and country, a leader who truly put the country first no matter the cost.”

  • Bamidele pays tributes to Buhari, Oba Adetona

    Bamidele pays tributes to Buhari, Oba Adetona

    …describes both leaders as proponents of peace, stability, unity

    Leader of the Senate, Senator Opeyemi Bamidele, has paid tributes to former President Muhammadu Buhari and the Paramount Ruler of Ijebuland, Awujale of Ijebu Ode, Oba Sikiru Kayode Adetona (Ogbagba II), describing them as unrepentant proponents of peace, stability and unity

    In a statement by the Directorate of Media and Public Affairs, Office of the Leader of the Senate on Monday, Bamidele reflected on how Buhari and Oba Adetona patriotically served their fatherland, states and communities before they were both called home respectively at full ripe ages of 82 and 91.

    He, therefore, observed that their passage was not just a huge loss to their immediate families, communities and states, but also to the Federal Republic of Nigeria, West Africa, Africa at large and the black nations worldwide, which they served in different capacities until Sunday, 13th July 2025.

    As a Military Head of State (January 1984 – August 1985), Bamidele noted that Buhari was an embodiment of discipline and self-control, leading with personal integrity “to rid the country’s public of all forms of malfeasance and set our fatherland on the track of justice and rectitude.

    In the Fourth Republic, specifically, Bamidele reflected on how Buhari pitched his tent with the people, joined forces with the progressives across the Niger and fought the conservatives under whose administrations Nigeria experienced economic regression and institutional decay.

    He noted Buhari’s struggles for a graft-free Nigeria, starting from when he fearlessly contested the presidential elections on the platform of the defunct All Nigeria Peoples Party to when he spearheaded the formation of the defunct Congress for Progressive Change and when he teamed up with the progressives across the Nigeria to form All Progressives Congress, the political force that eventually brought the progressives to national prominence in 2015.

    READ ALSO: Buhari’s last public appearances

    Bamidele, thus, extended deepest condolences to his wife, Aisha Buhari; all his children, the traditional leaders of the Daura Emirate, the government and people of Katsina State and of course the Federal Republic of Nigeria, especially the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, His Excellency Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    On behalf of the Senate and its South-West Caucus on Monday, Bamidele condoled the Anikilaya Ruling House of Ijebu-Ode, the entire people of Ijebu Kingdom as well as the government and people of Ogun State over the passage of the highly revered monarch, whose departure from this life was announced on Sunday.

    Bamidele described the departed monarch as a natural proponent of peace and stability, whose reign between January 1960 and July 2025 witnessed real growth and development, ruling consciously not as a sectional leader, but as the ruler of all his subjects regardless of their political leaning, race and religion.

    At different dispensations, according to Bamidele, Oba Sikiru Adetona maintained the sanctity of royalty and staunchly defended his kingdom, whether under the military ruler or during the democratic eras.

    The Senate Leader added that the monarch convincingly “lived and worked for the development, peace and unity not only of Ijebu Kingdom, Ogun State or South-west, but indeed of our fatherland at large.”

  • Tompolo mourns ex-president Buhari

    Tompolo mourns ex-president Buhari

    The Chairman of Tantita Security Services Nigeria Limited (TSSNL) and the Ibe-Ebidouwei of the Ijaw Nation, High Chief (Dr.) Government Ekpemupolo a.k.a Tompolo, has joined several Nigerians in mourning the passage of the immediate past President Muhammad Buhari.

    Tompolo, in a statement, Monday, described Buhari as an unmaterialistic, principled and patriotic Nigerian who contributed his quota to the country’s development.

    He noted that it was these attributes that led him to contract his firm for the safeguarding of oil and gas assets in 2022.

    The statement read, “Buhari was a principled and patriotic Nigerian who contributed his quota to the development of Nigeria during his tenure as President from 2015 to 2023.

    “He was not a materialistic person and was content with what God blessed him with.

    READ ALSO: Buhari’s last public appearances

    “He sought persons of character, goodwill, and vigour to serve the country while he was President.

    “That informed his hiring of Tantita Security Services Nigeria Limited to handle the surveillance of critical oil and gas facilities in 2022, when the country’s oil and gas infrastructures were bleeding.

    “Today, the story is different as the country is progressing steadily towards attaining a peak in oil production.”

    “Nigerians will miss his contributions to the unity and peace of their country.

    “I extend my heartfelt condolences to the country, his family, and close associates,” the statement, which prayed for a peaceful rest of the former President’s soul, concluded.

  • Buhari’s last public appearances

    Buhari’s last public appearances

    The death of Nigeria’s former president and military ruler, Muhammadu Buhari, has continued to elicit a flurry of reactions.

    Buhari died on Sunday, July 13, at a London hospital, his spokesperson, Garba Shehu, announced.

    He was 82. With the surfeit of profound tributes so far, Buhari’s death has been variously described as a great loss to the country.

    “The family of the former president has announced the passing of Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR, this afternoon in a clinic in London. May Allah accept him in Aljannatul Firdaus, Amin, Shehu wrote in a message posted on X (formerly Twitter).

    According to reports, Buhari had been receiving treatment at a London medical facility for several weeks.

    He had been abroad since April, initially for what his aides described as a routine medical check-up, before his condition reportedly worsened.

    Buhari served as Nigeria’s democratically elected president from 2015 to 2023, having previously ruled the country as a military head of state from January 1984 to August 1985. He stepped down from office on 29 May 2023 after completing the constitutionally allowed two terms.

    During his lifetime, Buhari had an imposing presence even before he spoke. He is easily distinguished by his appearance and height. His death marks the end of an era in the country’s political and military history.

    What has been more confounding after the demise of Buhari was his last moments. Before travelling abroad, Buhari in the early months of April this year, received different personalities at his home.

    In April, former Vice President Atiku Abubakar led a delegation of prominent politicians. The delegation included former governors and other notable politicians.

    They are: former Governor of Kaduna State, Nasir el-Rufai; former governor of Sokoto, Aminu Tambuwal; former governor of Imo State, Achike Udenwa; former governor of Benue, Gabriel Suswam; former governor of Adamawa, Jibrilla Bindow; former Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami; and former Minister of Communications, Isa Pantami

    Read Also: BREAKING: Tinubu announces Buhari’s death, sends Shettima to escort body to Nigeria

    Some days later, All Progressives Congress (APC) governors, led by Senator Hope Uzodimma, paid a similar visit to Buhari.

    Uzodimma, who also chairs the Progressive Governors Forum, said their visit was to extend Sallah greetings and congratulate Buhari on the successful completion of the Ramadan fast.

    Also in April, Former President of the African Development Bank (AfDB), Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, paid a courtesy visit to Buhari at his Kaduna residence.

    Adesina thanked Buhari for his unwavering support during both his initial election and eventual re-election as AfDB President.

    The National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress, Abdullahi Ganduje, also led members of the party’s National Working Committee to visit Buhari at his residence in Kaduna State.

    In May, the Former chairman of the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC), Abdulrasheed Bawa, also visited Buhari in London, the United Kingdom.

    For Buhari, it may be curtain calls, but he leaves behind some virtues that endeared him to many.

  • BREAKING: FG declares July 15 as public holiday to honour Buhari

    BREAKING: FG declares July 15 as public holiday to honour Buhari

    The Federal Government has declared Tuesday, 15 July, a public holiday in honour of the late former President Muhammadu Buhari’s death

    The government said it was in furtherance of the seven days of national mourning declared by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    The Minister of Interior, Dr. Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, made the declaration on behalf of the Federal Government, following the approval of His Excellency, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    Tunji-Ojo said the holiday is a mark of respect for the late president’s service to the nation, his contributions to Nigeria’s democratic journey, and his enduring legacy in governance and national development.

    The declaration was contained in a statement signed by the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry, Dr Magdalene Ajani.

    READ ALSO; Adeleke slams Aregbesola Over 2026 guber threat, labels his tenure worst in Osun history

    “President Muhammadu Buhari served Nigeria with dedication, integrity, and an unwavering commitment to the unity and progress of our great nation. This public holiday provides an opportunity for all Nigerians to reflect on their life, leadership, and the values they uphold,” the Minister said.

    He urged citizens to use the day to honour the late President’s memory by promoting peace, patriotism, and national cohesion, in line with his vision for a prosperous and united Nigeria.

    “As earlier announced, the National flags are to fly at half-mast for the seven days of mourning period from Sunday, 13th July, 2025.

    “The Federal Government extends its deepest condolences to the family of the late President, the people of Katsina State, and all Nigerians, while praying for the peaceful repose of his soul”, the Minister further said.