FEMI ADESINA: I will say yes. The President is somebody that I
have admired for a long time since he was a military ruler. When he was a
military ruler, I was already in my third year in the university. So, I
can say I knew him and his style
and I liked it. I felt sorry when his government was overthrown. So, when he came back into partisan politics in 2003, it was something that was very exciting for me and since then, I have been supporting him. I am a journalist and I write a weekly column. I have been pointing Nigerians in his direction since 2003. And whenever I wrote anything in his (Buhari’s) support, he would call me on the phone and we would discuss and he would thank me.
and I liked it. I felt sorry when his government was overthrown. So, when he came back into partisan politics in 2003, it was something that was very exciting for me and since then, I have been supporting him. I am a journalist and I write a weekly column. I have been pointing Nigerians in his direction since 2003. And whenever I wrote anything in his (Buhari’s) support, he would call me on the phone and we would discuss and he would thank me.
I remember in 2009 or thereabout when Prof. Tam David-West wrote a book
on Buhari and it was to be presented at the Nigerian Institute of
International Affairs. I was the master of ceremony of the occasion so
we got to speak and know each other better. That was the first time I
would meet him (Buhari) in person.
Thereafter, he ran for President in 2011 and I still wrote in my column that I thought he was the best person to rule Nigeria and bring a change. Whenever I wrote those things, he would call me and he would thank me and we would talk.
So, eventually, in August 2013, I lost my mother and we needed to do her funeral. So, I sent Buhari an invitation card. The service was in Lagos and lo and behold, before the service started, he drove in. It was a pleasant surprise. It was a Christian service and he sat through it. Those who had said that he was a religious bigot were shocked. This was a Muslim man that came for a Christian service and attended the full service and yet they were saying he was a religious bigot.
So, that act cemented our relationship because after the event, I phoned
him the next day and thanked him but he said he was the one that should
be grateful because he had never given me a kobo and yet I always gave
him all the support. He said there were people that could pay me
millions of naira for such support but I had decided to pitch my tent
with somebody that could not give me anything. So, that cemented our
relationship.
You know, in 2011, he said he would not contest the Presidency again but in the run up to the 2015 election, I felt he should still run and I wrote that the fact that he said in 2011 that he would not run again could not be carved in concrete and he could change his mind if he wanted and the rest, they say, is history. He changed his mind, he ran and he won.
You know, in 2011, he said he would not contest the Presidency again but in the run up to the 2015 election, I felt he should still run and I wrote that the fact that he said in 2011 that he would not run again could not be carved in concrete and he could change his mind if he wanted and the rest, they say, is history. He changed his mind, he ran and he won.
Significantly, on the night that he was declared the winner, my phone
rang around midnight and one of our leaders in the media called and
said, ‘Please hold on for Gen. Muhammadu Buhari’. I was shocked and when
he spoke to me, he said he appreciated my support throughout the
campaigns and now that victory had come his way, he just wanted to say
thank you. So, that was how it played out.
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