• Resumes work tomorrow
President Muhammadu Buhari is expected back today from the United
Kingdom, where he has been holidaying. The President took a 10-day
leave, and was expected to, on the advice of E.N.T specialists, seek
routine medical examination of his left ear.
The President, who left Nigeria on Monday, June 10, was expected back
on Wednesday, June 15, to resume work on Thursday, June 16, but the
plans changed.
On Thursday, the Presidency gave a new date of the arrival of the
President for Sunday (today). Osinbajo, who confirmed the latest
development in his chat with State House correspondents, shortly before
entering Council Chambers, where he presided over the National Economic
Council (NEC) meeting at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, said the
extension was to enable the President rest fully for the weekend.Online reports had, prior to Thursday, been awash with information that
the President’s condition might have worsened, but the Vice President
said Buhari was in the perfect health condition, and only taking his
time, because of the impending weekend.
Osinbajo confirmed he spoke with the President on phone, on Wednesday
evening, and that he was doing fine. The Vice President noted the
decision to extend the President’s stay in the United Kingdom, might
have been as a result of the fact that weekend was approaching.
In his words, “The President will be back on Sunday. I spoke with him
yesterday (Wednesday) evening and I think it is just okay that he takes
the weekend off. He will certainly be back on Sunday.
“I think the most straightforward thing is when he will be back.
There is no point rushing back on Friday or something like that. He will
just take the weekend off and be back on Sunday. He is in perfect
health and ready to resume work on Monday morning.
“Mr. President is in good condition, he is fine; he is very well. He
should take a day or two off in London and rest a bit and come back hale
and hearty on Sunday and be ready for work on Monday. So we expect him
back on Sunday.”On the same day, the Presidency also released to the media the
photographs the President took with National Leader of the ruling All
Progressives Congress, (APC), Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, who visited him
in the Nigerian Embassy in London.
The last two weeks have, however, been an eventful one for Osinbajo
as Acting President. A few minutes after Buhari left the country on
Monday, Osinbajo hosted a delegation of the European Union led by the EU
Ambassador in Nigeria, Mr. Michel Arrion. During that visit, he
explained the rationale behind the Federal Government’s decision not to
name those it recovered looted fund from.
The following day, he had a meeting with the nation’s service chiefs
and governors of oil-producing states on the renewed violence in the
Niger Delta by militants, which had crippled crude oil production and
power supply.
On Wednesday, June 8, Osinbajo presided over a meeting of the Federal
Executive Council (FEC) that had about 22 of the 36 ministers in
attendance. Later that day, he personally signed a condolence message he
wrote in honour of a former coach of the national team, Stephen Keshi,
who died earlier in the day.
On Thursday, he also inaugurated the Federal Government’s National
Home Grown School Feeding programme, which is a component of the Social
Investment Plan promised by the All Progressives Congress government.As he did for
Keshi, Osinbajo also personally signed the condolence message on the
death of another former Coach of the Super Eagles, Shaibu Amodu, who
passed away on Saturday, June 11.
However, while it has been a beehive of activities at the Vice
President’s wing of the Presidential Villa, the President’s wing has
been as quiet as ever, save for occasional visits by some ministers to
the Chief of Staff (CoS) and visitors to some of the President’s
personal aides.
But with the expected return of the President to Abuja today and his
subsequent resumption of office tomorrow, normal activities are expected
to return to their full status.
Source

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