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President Buhari back to London for Medical Consultations
President Muhammadu Buhari Sunday night departed Nigeria for London for a follow-up medical consultation with his doctors.
He had planned to leave Sunday afternoon, but decided to tarry a bit, due to the arrival of 82 Chibok girls who arrived Abuja earlier in the day.
Presidency spokesman Femi Adesina said the 74-year-old’s doctors would determine how long he stayed in the British capital, where he spent nearly two months undergoing treatment from mid-January.
“The president wishes to assure all Nigerians that there is no cause for worry,” Adesina said in a statement posted on the presidency’s Facebook page and Twitter feed.
“He is very grateful for the prayers and good wishes of the people, and hopes they would continue to pray for the peace and unity of the nation.”
Meanwhile, Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo and Senate President Bukola Saraki on Sunday night paid a farewell visit to President Muhammadu Buhari, who was scheduled to leave for London on medical trip.
The President, who confirmed this development on his twitter handle on Sunday in Abuja, said he also received the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, in the Presidential Villa on similar mission.
President Buhari posted: “I received Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, Senate President Bukola Saraki and Speaker Yakubu Dogara at home this evening ahead of my trip tonight.’’
Buhari’s previous trip to London in January was billed by his office as a 10-day holiday combining “routine medical check-ups” but it was extended from early February and he only returned in early March.
The former military ruler then contradicted his aides insistence that he was “hale and hearty”, telling his senior ministers he had undergone blood transfusions and had never been as sick in his life.
This time, no timeframe was given for his absence.
“The length of the president’s stay in London will be determined by the doctors. Government will continue to function normally under the able leadership of the Vice-President (Yemi Osinbajo),” Adesina said.
Parliament had been informed, as required by the constitution, he added.
Buhari had not been seen in public for several weeks until last Friday, when he attended weekly prayers at the presidential villa, after missing the last three cabinet meetings and other engagements.
Aides have said he was working from home and had undergone a “long period of treatment” in London.
Buhari has been under pressure to disclose the nature of his illness but has said he would have to have follow-up treatment in London.
Earlier on Sunday, he was pictured sitting in an armchair at his residence, dressed in white traditional robes, looking painfully gaunt, surrounded by 82 recently released Chibok schoolgirls.
Adesina said Buhari would have left earlier on Sunday but wanted to meet the students, who were kidnapped by Boko Haram Islamists in northeast Nigeria in April 2014, causing worldwide outrage.
The health of Nigeria’s president has been a sensitive issue after Umaru Musa Yar’Adua fell ill and died in office in 2010 from a long-standing, but undisclosed, kidney complaint.
His long absence abroad and death triggered months of political turmoil.