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Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike - Politics - Nairaland

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Presidency Reacts To Brouhaha Over Telegraph Interview-pilot Newspaper / Presidency Reacts To Rumour That Buhari Received Money From Dasuki / Presidency Reacts To Soyinka's 'Nebuchadnezzar' Tag On Jonathan (2) (3) (4)

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Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by Nobody: 5:29am On Jul 22, 2014
‘Jonathan not to blame’

In a statement issued at about 10.40pm last night, Presidential spokesman Reuben Abati said Buhari should not blame Jonathan for APC’s “self-inflicted” woes.

The statement said, “Although he tries very hard to deny it…there can be no doubt that General Buhari has sadly moved away from the patriotic and statesmanlike position he recently adopted on national security, which President Jonathan publicly commended, and has now reverted to unbridled political partisanship.

“There can be no other explanation or justification for the completely unwarranted and very uncharitable assault on the conduct and integrity of President Jonathan which the statement he issued today represents.

“General Buhari’s main grouse which clearly motivated his ill-considered statement appears to be what he called ‘the gale of impeachments or the utilisation of desperate tactics to suffocate the opposition and turn Nigeria into a one-party state’.

“It is most unfortunate that instead of working to put their house in order and resolve the leadership crises and internal contradictions that have plunged their party into a downward spiral, General Buhari and his opposition allies have resorted to blaming a blameless President for their woes.

“The processes for impeaching an elected Governor are clearly stipulated in the National Constitution which Nigeria has operated since 1999. The President of Nigeria is not assigned any role in that process and President Jonathan has certainly not played any role in the recent impeachment of Governor Murtala Nyako of Adamawa or in the impeachment drama currently being played out in Nasarawa State.

“For the record, President remains fully committed to upholding the letters, principles and spirit of the Nigerian Constitution as he has sworn, and defending the rule of law and integrity of the democratic process with all his might.

“General Buhari talks about anarchy. He needs to be reminded that President Jonathan from his humble beginnings as a Deputy Governor in Bayelsa state to date, has never in his acts, or utterances, recommended or promoted violence as a tool of political negotiation.

“Contrary to whatever General Buhari and his new friends may imagine, President Jonathan fully respects the rights, powers, authority and independence of elected representatives of the people, including the members of the state assemblies who have concluded or initiated impeachment proceedings against their state governors on grounds which they consider justifiable.

“The constitution does not give the President any power to intervene in such proceedings and President Jonathan has never arrogated such powers to himself or sought to exert any nefarious and unconstitutional influence on state assemblies in Adamawa, Nasarawa or anywhere else in other to secure undue political advantage for his party as General Buhari unjustifiably alleges.

“President Jonathan remains true to his declaration that no political ambition of his is worth the life of a single Nigerian. The President has definitely not declared war on his own country or deployed federal institutions in the service of partisan interests as General Buhari falsely claims. Neither has he been using the common wealth to subvert the system and punish the opposition, as the former Head of State inexcusably asserts.

“Also, President Jonathan has never at any time ordered that any Nigerian should be kidnapped or that anyone should be crated and forcefully transported in violation of decent norms of governance.

“We therefore urge General Buhari to tarry a while, ponder over his own antecedents and do a reality check as to whether he has the moral right to be so carelessly sanctimonious.

“It may well be time to pull the brakes, as General Buhari says in his statement, but it is he and others who have resorted to idle scapegoating and blaming President Jonathan for their self-inflected political troubles who need to stop their inexcusable partisanship and show greater regard for the truth, democracy, constitutionalism, the rule of law, peace, security and the well-being of the nation.

http://www.dailytrust.com.ng/daily/top-stories/29793-buhari-warns-jonathan

5 Likes

Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by OtunbaJega: 5:31am On Jul 22, 2014
Blame everybody but yourself...useless government...

is that why they are shielding Boko Haram to blackmail the General?

8 Likes

Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by Nobody: 5:34am On Jul 22, 2014
OtunbaJega: Blame everybody but yourself...useless government...

is that why they are shielding Boko Haram to blackmail the General?
Who's doing the blame game now? APC or GEJ? Why is APC and Buhari bent on blaming GEJ for their recent political woes?

5 Likes

Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by samuelkaykay(m): 5:41am On Jul 22, 2014
All our leaders,past and present are responsible for our problems.
Shameless leaders!

1 Like

Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by Nobody: 5:43am On Jul 22, 2014
Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by OtunbaJega: 5:48am On Jul 22, 2014
Sincere9gerian: Thread closed

https://www.nairaland.com/1823418/dont-blame-me-partys-self-inflicted

Loser!... referring us to a thread full of comments from block heads like himself.... olofo
Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by Omexonomy: 5:52am On Jul 22, 2014
APC a pack of crumbling houses built on a mountain of saw dust and now they are blaming the opposition. Tell ur APC governos to stop sponsoring BH and satisfy the people though not through media hype and propaganda.
Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by earthgreeners(m): 5:54am On Jul 22, 2014
[quote author=Omexonomy]PDP a pack of crumbling houses built on a mountain of saw dust and now they are blaming the opposition. Tell ur Jonathan to stop sponsoring BH and satisfy the people though not through media hype and propaganda.[quote]
Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by earthgreeners(m): 5:55am On Jul 22, 2014
Omexonomy: [s]APC a pack of crumbling houses built on a mountain of saw dust and now they are blaming the opposition. Tell ur APC governos to stop sponsoring BH and satisfy the people though not through media hype and propaganda[/s].

jargons
Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by psucc(m): 6:09am On Jul 22, 2014
But this same President had severally been called, addressed and known as clueless, slow, daft, etc, and yet he is driving Nigeria into anarchy.

What an iron.
Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by OtunbaJega: 6:15am On Jul 22, 2014
[quote author=Sincere9gerian][/quote] ok
Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by Nobody: 6:35am On Jul 22, 2014
First law of politics: " do not retreat, do not retract, do not accept that you have done wrong" Niccolo Machiavelli.
Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by nagoma(m): 6:42am On Jul 22, 2014
Buhari -

The People's General, an officer and a gentleman
Law and order makes a nation, same law for rich and for poor.
The man who walks his talk , riches are not his worldly objective
A nationalist who wants to see Nigeria great and respected
A man focused and upright & not given to temptations
Tea totaller non smoker seeks for altruism and a society just and prosperous.
Chains of property, foreign accounts , fleet of jets and cars and other lusts are weaknesses for a leader.
Real strength is of character, real wealth is the wealth of all, real nation is a just nation.
A man of experience , never haughty or arrogant yet head and shoulder above the midgets.
Unassailable ,incorruptible, tested and trusted - use him while he is available.
BUHARI - Hated by criminals. So when are they going to pay for his impeachment him for telling them the truth?

Sent from my iPad

4 Likes

Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by Daguccizgreat(m): 6:52am On Jul 22, 2014
The way Apc is going, very soon they will start to blame federal govt for their wives miscarriages

1 Like

Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by pfijacobs(m): 6:52am On Jul 22, 2014
Accusations and counter accusations... Just like ping pong... Abeg e no concern me o jare
Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by Dreal1247: 7:12am On Jul 22, 2014
nagoma: Buhari -

The People's General, an officer and a gentleman
Law and order makes a nation, same law for rich and for poor.
The man who walks his talk , riches are not his worldly objective
A nationalist who wants to see Nigeria great and respected
A man focused and upright & not given to temptations
Tea totaller non smoker seeks for altruism and a society just and prosperous.
Chains of property, foreign accounts , fleet of jets and cars and other lusts are weaknesses for a leader.
Real strength is of character, real wealth is the wealth of all, real nation is a just nation.
A man of experience , never haughty or arrogant yet head and shoulder above the midgets.
Unassailable ,incorruptible, tested and trusted - use him while he is available.
BUHARI - Hated by criminals. So when are they going to pay for his impeachment him for telling them the truth?

Sent from my iPad
.
........a man who wants to islamise Nigeria by any possible means. No way.

1 Like

Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by Omimah: 7:12am On Jul 22, 2014
What does Rueben Abati know about being a stateman?

2 Likes

Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by Jakumo(m): 7:15am On Jul 22, 2014
"Statesmanlike" has NEVER been a term that could be used even remotely to describe Ayatollah Buhari Bin Laden of the "Blood will Flow" fame.

That creature is simply an evil entity and terror instigator that MUST be eradicated like the horrid little vermin that it is, and the sooner the better.


That noise-making muffugh has lived by the sword, applying it freely via proxies, against innocents, so he is LONG overdue to taste that same muffugin sword, at long last, and thus be dispatched to hell where he belongs.

Johnny B. Goode, your administration has a RIGHT and a DUTY to arrest and detain in protective custody ALL instigators of violence against the state or her citizens, and ALL who are openly jubilant whenever terrorists strike. Get rid of this nasty cancer, once and for all.

2 Likes

Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by Nobody: 7:18am On Jul 22, 2014
nagoma: Buhari -

The People's General, an officer and a gentleman
Law and order makes a nation, same law for rich and for poor.
The man who walks his talk , riches are not his worldly objective
A nationalist who wants to see Nigeria great and respected
A man focused and upright & not given to temptations
Tea totaller non smoker seeks for altruism and a society just and prosperous.
Chains of property, foreign accounts , fleet of jets and cars and other lusts are weaknesses for a leader.
Real strength is of character, real wealth is the wealth of all, real nation is a just nation.
A man of experience , never haughty or arrogant yet head and shoulder above the midgets.
Unassailable ,incorruptible, tested and trusted - use him while he is available.
BUHARI - Hated by criminals. So when are they going to pay for his impeachment him for telling them the truth?

Sent from my iPad
cool cool cool

1 Like

Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by Decibel: 8:03am On Jul 22, 2014
OtunbaJega: Blame everybody but yourself...useless government...

is that why they are shielding Boko Haram to blackmail the General?
A paid-agent trying so hard to justify his pay. Keep it up!
Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by omenka(m): 8:11am On Jul 22, 2014
OtunbaJega: Is that why they are shielding Boko Haram to blackmail the General?
You are absolutely right. Their approach is 5 pronged:

1) Use it to decimate the population of the electorates
sympathetic to the opposition.

2) Use it as a front to loot the country dry through the
allocation of a substantial fraction of our budget to defence
and the award of defence contracts running into billions of
dollars, the end result of which is only evident in the bank
accounts of the PDP chiefs. Everyone knows the account
books of the defence ministry is never scrutinised, neither
are their accounts audited! It is a safe haven for the sleaziest crooks we have in this country! These monies are eventually used to prosecute elections and ensure the killer party retains power at the centre. The $1bill loan being sought after quickly comes to mind.

3) It was created to be used as a tool to blackmail the
opposition. The scourge of kidnapping would have been a
lot worse than it is today had the opposition been as strong
as it is in the north in the south east!!

4) It was created to be used as a tool or cover to wipe out
opposition bigwigs. State agents could assassinate a party
chieftain Boko Haram style, riding motorcycles and throwing
a couple grenades, and the gullible general public would
wave it off as just another victim of Boko Haram!!

5) Use it to distabilize the north and other opposition
strongholds, with INEC in tow to declear such states unsafe
for elections (Jega already hinted at that), effectively
disenfranchising a horde of opposition voters, leaving
mostly PDP friendly states to have elections!!


Anyone who doesn't see this handwriting on the wall is
acutely shortsighted or simply ignorant.

2 Likes

Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by nagoma(m): 11:49am On Jul 22, 2014
berem: cool cool cool

Berem my Dear, thank you. You see how difficult it is to deal with crooked averted to the truth ?
Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by chamboy(m): 11:56am On Jul 22, 2014
Daguccizgreat: The way Apc is going, very soon they will start to blame federal govt for their wives miscarriages
Bro U r Dumb
Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by koboko69: 12:01pm On Jul 22, 2014
[size=18pt]Buharinomics - General Buhari’s economic program marshaled out to salvage the nation in 1984 [/size]

http://www.elombah.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=5720:is-general-buhari-the-problem-with-nigeria&catid=36:pointblank&Itemid=83

Buharinomics was General Buhari’s economic program marshaled out to salvage the nation in 1984. He summarized the objective of his economic policy (as articulated in the 1984 budget) as follows: "To arrest the decline in the economy, to put the economy on a proper course of recovery and solvency, and to chart a future course for economic stability and prosperity" (West Africa, May 14, 1984). He had previously done similarly, in March while receiving the visiting Sudanese President, Gaafar Nimeiri. Upon his inquiring of what the new military government had in mind for the nation it then ruled, Buhari said to him: "The priority [of his administration] is for economic recovery, providing employment opportunities, improving people's living conditions, consolidating internal security and ensuring foreign respect" (Africa Now, March 1984). In a nutshell, Buharinomics set out to arrest the decline in the economy and refocus it towards recovery. Buharinomics was to wean the nation off consumerism and profligacy, while channeling it towards frugality and productivity. To accomplish this, the government was to cut down on its expenditure, engage in more efficient restricting and controlling of foreign exchange outflow, undertake the revival of the country's productive capacity (concentration was on agriculture), and broaden government's revenue base.
www.nairaland.com/attachments/635156_Buhari_jpgd50be5e2308ebe86c9271391021b0a5f
The first test of Buharinomics was implemented to revive the comatose banking industry and arrest local currency hoarding. In April 1984, the government ordered a change in the color of the Naira. This action was dubbed the “real coup” by unscrupulous business men and politicians who had almost eliminated the need for commercial banking in Nigeria by keeping their moneys under their mattresses or by trafficking them into neighboring West African countries. This currency change, which forced all holders of the naira notes into exchanging them for the new naira notes at commercial banks, infused billions that had remained unaccounted for into the banking industry and eliminated counterfeited currencies, which had inflicted inflationary and other nefarious effects on the economy. This measure had an immediate revitalizing effect in the banking industry and was an unqualified success. Banks that were close to collapsing became vibrant again, to the extent that some of them began to hire hitherto unemployed Nigerians.
www.nairaland.com/attachments/635893_Gen__Buhari_jpg3932850d15a62856c902dd8cc516cff9
To cut down on government expenses, the federal work force was cut by 30% and imports for 1984 pegged at 4 billion pounds (mostly on basic foodstuffs, spare parts, and raw materials for local industries), against 14 billion pounds spent in 1983. To ensure that Nigeria remained respectable on the international business world, Buhari committed to honoring Nigeria’s debt payment schedule irrespective of the limited earning potential of Nigeria. In August 1984, Buhari was on one of his meet-the-people nationwide tours, which he began as soon as the administration got on its feet. Everywhere he went, the people embraced him, coming out en mass and ushering him tumultuous cheers and unreserved applause. In one of his speeches to the people (this one in Owerri), he reiterated Nigeria’s commitment to honoring its debts, the dire economic situation notwithstanding. "The task of this administration is how to persuade Nigerians to understand that for a number of years to come, we would be paying debts, the roads may be long and thorny but we believe that on our shoulders lies the responsibility to save our fatherland from devastation that has resulted from mismanagement" (Newswatch, February 18, 1985).
[img]https://www.nairaland.com/attachments/635886_Gen__Buhari_-_Armed_Forces_Day_jpgae96a40b5e2050b6d582cd44f4943800[/img]
Buhari could not have been any more correct in his statement above. Assuming Nigeria took no further loans, its breakdown of loan repayments was as follows: 3.9 billion naira ($4.4 billion) in 1985, 3.7 billion naira ($4.19 billion) in 1986, 2.8 billion naira ($3.2 billion) in 1987, until a decrease to 703 million in 1991 (Concord Weekly, May 6, 1985). Nigeria’s precarious financial situation made it impossible for it to finance capital projects and meet up its balance of payment obligations. With oil export pegged at 1.3 million barrels per day by OPEC, borrowing from external sources became necessary. To this effect, Nigeria proposed borrowing 1.795m naira to finance its capital project from the IMF. The patriotism with which General Buhari handled Nigeria’s dealings with the IMF was the highlight and beauty of Buharinomics.

[img]https://www.nairaland.com/attachments/635887_General_Muhammadu-Buhari-1984_jpg807fb78f1366f42744d90196f32d264e[/img]
In order to qualify for the loan, IMF gave Nigeria certain conditions which must be met. In 1984 when the naira exchanged for $1.34, the IMF demanded a minimum of 60% devaluation of it. Buhari refused, agreeing only to a "crawling peg"—a mechanism whereby government would realign the currency gradually, forestalling or minimizing economic and social dislocations because of such drastic devaluation of its currency. In addition to the devaluation of the naira, IMF demanded that government took other drastic actions: (a) The government must remove its subsidy on petroleum. (b) It must curtail its expenditure. (c) Government must rationalize its tariff structures. (d) It must put a freeze on its wages. (e) It must put a total end of non-statutory transfers to State governments, (f) Government must at least institute a 30% raise on interest rates—government resisted this because the decline in its revenue earnings and its debt obligations made it almost impossible to raise interest rates without triggering inflation (West Africa, May 14, 1984).
www.nairaland.com/attachments/908607_Gen_Buhari_jpg680f0e3cee55a5a2432551406739fb8e
The Nigerian government and veteran economists in Nigeria (like Aluko, Onosade, Okigbo, etc) could not make sense of being asked to devalue its currency when Nigeria’s imports were in dollar and its export (fixed quantity of oil) was also in dollar. The implication of devaluation was that Nigeria would pay more to import lesser quantity of goods than it did prior to any devaluation. It would also export the same amount of oil it exported before any devaluation and derive lesser revenue than it received before any devaluation The impacts of it debt payment would have harsher effect on the citizenry if the naira was devalued. This did not make any economic sense to Buhari; it struck him as an insult on the intelligence of the African. Finance Minister Onaolapo Soleye and Alhaji Abubakar Alhaji who led the Nigerian delegation to the last negotiation in Washington were chewed out by US Federal Reserve Chairman, Paul Volcker, for presenting the Nigerian governments rejection of most of these recommendations. For rejecting the IMF conditions and the loan, the Buhari administration got into the black book of Washington. Already, it had earned the dislike of 10 Downing Street for cutting down Nigeria’s imports from the UK by about 350%. In any case, without the IMF loan, government was still in a bind as to how to finance capital projects and pay for imports, especially spare parts for local industries, food items, etc. At this juncture, the genius and resourcefulness of Buharinomics illuminated to the delight of the African.
www.nairaland.com/attachments/686219_buhari_parade_jpgcf420c430ac5cdb9a5c0fadf1e0fb509
First, the administration sent Oil Minister Tam David West to OPEC to seek a raise in the quantity of oil that Nigeria could export. If OPEC agreed, Nigeria would expect to generate extra revenue in the long run from any increase of its oil quota and this would assist tremendously in augmenting the shortfall in the nation’s purse. Professor West came back empty handed—the US and Britain had put pressure on their puppets in OPEC (like Saudi Arabia) to refuse Nigeria’s request.
www.nairaland.com/attachments/710787_buhari_pic_gif0b92a71a0ffa3f1da9713778c0f7a2f0
To counter OPEC’s bluff, the Buhari administration entered into a $2 billion barter trade agreement with four countries. Nigeria daily bartered 200,000 barrels of oil as follows: (a) completely knocked down parts for automobiles from Brazil. (b) Construction equipment from Italy (c) Engineering equipment from France, and (d) Capital goods from Austria. This barter trade took care of the administration’s need to have borrowed money but it intensified the ill will the US and Britain had for Nigeria. By bartering this oil, Nigeria was: (a) solving those needs which the proposed IMF loan was geared toward. Doing so without borrowing or feeling the pains of spending the meager amount generated from its OPEC approved 1.3 billion a day oil export is the stuff an economic wizard is made of. (b) Britain had been cut off as Nigeria’s major supplier of the goods which the countries in the barter agreement sent to Nigeria. (c) The US usurious money lenders were denied the chance to suck Nigeria dry through the IMF loan. (d) American and British oil companies were irate that the oil being bartered would flood the oil market, cutting in on their profits. (d) The oil being bartered was oil that used to be illegally bunkered before Buhari put illegal oil bunkering artist out of business. For once, an African country had put positive economic mechanism in place to salvage its ailing economy without swallowing IMF’s poison pills.
www.nairaland.com/attachments/726098_Buhari_jpgd50be5e2308ebe86c9271391021b0a5f
As far as America and Britain were concerned, there was a price to be paid by this Buhari, who thought he was smart enough not to accept subservience to their authority. To begin with, a London newspaper (The Financial Times) published Nigeria’s barter trade agreement with Brazil (which, in truth, was done in secrecy because Buhari treated some aspects of his economic policy as State secret). The British thought it was going to incite OPEC against Nigeria since OPEC as a body did not support oil bartering. Oil Minister Tam David West, in a press conference, said, “If a nation believes it is part of its strategy for national survival to do this [barter trade], why not?” To assure OPEC that Nigeria was not indulging in barter trade in order to pull out of OPEC, he added ”Our strategy is to stay in OPEC and make its presence felt, and work together on programs that will be for the economic interest of all” (Concord Weekly, May 6, 1985). There is more to this barter trade than time will permit one to detail in this piece. For now, it is worth noting that it was the major reason for which Britain and America wanted the Buhari administration overthrown.
www.nairaland.com/attachments/754009_Gen__Buhari_jpg3932850d15a62856c902dd8cc516cff9
The counter trade showcased Buhari as a visionary. He made America and Britain feel silly and they swore to get him out of office. When Babangida took over, on his maiden speech to the nation he promised to revisit the counter trade agreements. Within two weeks in office, September 17, 1985, he setup a panel to review it and recommend to his administration how to revive the economy without the use of counter trade. Babangida rolled back counter trade at the behest of his imperialist masters and at the detriment of the Nigerian nation and people.

[img]https://www.nairaland.com/attachments/754008_Gen__Buhari_-_Armed_Forces_Day_jpgae96a40b5e2050b6d582cd44f4943800[/img]
By the time the Buhari administration was overthrown in August of 1985, Buharinomics was beginning to yield dividends. For example, the inflationary rate had fallen from 23.2% in 1983 to 5.5% in 1985. Nigeria did not regret rejecting the IMF loan because it was meeting its obligation of prompt debt payment and the bartered goods were, to some extent, holding up within the austerity measure which had been in place since the Shagari days. Food was becoming reasonably available for two reasons: (a) The emphasis paid to agriculture had resulted in abundant food harvests, especially yam tubers. (b) The border closure made it impossible for unscrupulous business men to continue smuggling food items into neighboring countries where they sold for twice their value in Nigeria.

Had Buharinomics continued for at least five years, Nigeria would have joined the Asian tigers in economic growth and self reliance. We know that to be true because Babangida came into office and did everything the IMF asked and the Nigerian economy took a dive into the gutter and has not recovered yet.
[img]https://www.nairaland.com/attachments/754010_General_Muhammadu-Buhari-1984_jpg807fb78f1366f42744d90196f32d264e[/img]


For the corrupt. Fear of Buhari is the beginning of wisdom
Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by Noctec: 12:02pm On Jul 22, 2014
[size=18pt]Really?[/size]
Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by PehaKaso: 12:29pm On Jul 22, 2014
BUHARI is a BLOOD SUCKING DEMON

BUHARI is a BOKO HARAM CHIEF

BUHARI is a TERRORIST

BUHARI is EVIL

1 Like

Re: Presidency Reacts: Buhari No Longer Statesmanlike by iluvnaija: 12:56pm On Jul 22, 2014
The name BUHARI is a threat to criminals and politicians, so I am not surprised.

True!

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