Adviser: Nigeria’s ill president returns home
Nigerians saw only the familiar, official portrait of President Umaru Yar’Adua as a man’s voice read a statement on the government television channel. The vice president was due to meet with Yar’Adua’s wife — not him — sparking new worries about whether the president will ever resume power or just came home to die.
Shaky television footage showed an ambulance leaving the presidential wing of the capital airport early Wednesday but offered no images of the 58-year-old Yar’Adua, who has not been seen in public since leaving Nigeria on Nov. 23 to seek medical treatment in Saudi Arabia.
His long absence had raised concerns about who was in charge of the fragile West African country and had prompted lawmakers to put the vice president into power just two weeks ago.
The nation of 150 million people also has not heard Yar’Adua’s voice since a brief BBC radio interview he gave in January. Those surrounding Yar’Adua blocked a delegation of lawmakers from visiting him earlier this month at the Saudi hospital.
A statement Wednesday from presidential spokesman Olusegun Adeniyi said Goodluck Jonathan would continue to serve as acting president. That decision appears to protect Jonathan’s position, but also raises more questions about Yar’Adua’s health.
"President Yar’Adua wishes to reassure all Nigerians that on account of their unceasing prayers and by the special grace of God, his health has greatly improved," the statement read. "However, while the president completes his recuperation, Vice President Jonathan will continue to oversee the affairs of state."
The statement offered no other details about Yar’Adua’s condition. He has been plagued by poor health and kidney ailments, and his physician released a statement saying the president also suffered from acute pericarditis, an inflammation of the sac surrounding the heart.
Abdullah Aminchi, Nigeria’s ambassador to Saudi Arabia, said Yar’Adua needs time to recuperate before assuming presidential powers.
"He’s already walking. He eats. He can move about," the ambassador said. "I think he just needs some time to rest and he can go back to his work as president of Nigeria."
The parliament’s vote two weeks ago put Jonathan in the presidency, but specified that he had to cede power to Yar’Adua upon his return if he’s medically capable of leading. The lawmakers’ vote also went beyond the process envisioned by the constitution, presenting questions on how exactly Jonathan would transfer power back to Yar’Adua.
Reporters at the presidential villa on Wednesday caught no glimpse of the president but saw Yar’Adua’s chief aide, Col. Onoyveta Mustapha, before a scheduled Cabinet meeting.
Mustapha had been one of only a few trusted aides who stayed with and had access to Yar’Adua while he received treatment at the King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center in Jeddah.
Though the country’s constitution calls for the president to offer a written letter empowering the vice president to take over in his absence, Yar’Adua did not follow that procedure. The Nigerian government ground to a halt in Yar’Adua’s absence.
Before leaving Nigeria, he brokered a cease-fire with the main militant group in the Delta. But the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta called off the cease-fire during his absence and vowed to burn oil installations to the ground.
After more than two months of a standstill, the National Assembly voted to empower Vice President Goodluck Jonathan to take over as acting president.
Health problems are nothing new for Yar’Adua. During Yar’Adua’s 2007 presidential campaign, he left the country two weeks before the vote to receive medical care in Germany after experiencing what he described as a shortness of breath. His absence sparked enough concern then that outgoing President Olusegun Obasanjo even made a telephone call to Yar’Adua during a political rally to ask his candidate: "Umaru, are you dead?"
Despite those health concerns, Yar’Adua became president through an election marred by fraud, intimidation and violence. It marked the first time power was transferred from one elected civilian to another in Nigeria, which became independent from Britain in 1960.
News of Yar’Adua’s return received a quick response from the U.S., where Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton has issued calls to Nigeria to respect and follow its constitution. In a statement Wednesday, Assistant Secretary of State Johnnie Carson said the U.S. welcomed Yar’Adua’s return, but still had concerns about the nation’s future.
"Recent reports ... continue to suggest that President Yar’Adua’s health remains fragile and that he may still be unable to fulfill the demands of his office," Carson said. "We hope that President Yar’Adua’s return to Nigeria is not an effort by his senior advisers to upset Nigeria’s stability and create renewed uncertainty in the democratic process."
Meanwhile, Nigerians are left wondering if Yar’Adua even was on that flight. His portrait remains silent.
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