On March 9, 2010,
something happened which given the state of Nigeria right now, can best
be described as the mother of all ironies.

Late Yar'adua and Goodluck Jonathan
The
Nigerian president in that year was Umar Musa Yar'Adua and he had been
sick and away from the country for a while. The then vice president,
Goodluck Jonathan, was made the acting president and the entire country
was confused about the exact state of Yar'Adua's health.
Then
an opposition leader, General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd.), joined the
growing number of Nigerians to call for the removal of President Umaru
Musa Yar'Adua.
According
to the This Day article dated March 9, 2010, President Buhari
maintained that the only viable option out of the present political
logjam in the country was for the Executive Council of the Federation
(EXCOF) to declare the president incapacitated and have him impeached.
Buhari,
in 2010, said Nigeria should not have been in the situation it was in
the first instance because the constitution had made it clear on how an
ailing president could be succeeded.
Insisting
on Yar'Adua's impeachment, he said the refusal of the council to follow
constitutional provisions with regards to the illness of the then
president had thrown Nigeria into crisis and he argued that the 1999
Constitution was clear on the issue of succession when an incumbent
president is incapacitated.
Buhari, who is the president now, said all
this when he received members of the National Unity Forum in Kaduna who
paid him a solidarity visit.
Goodluck
Jonathan was not spared, as the former military ruler criticized what he
described as "extra-constitutional measures", the measures applied by
the National Assembly to empower Goodluck Jonathan as the acting
president when the constitution already had a solution to the problem.
Below were his words from March 2010:
"Political expediency won't remedy this
kind of problem because if the Executive Council of the Federation had
acted in accordance with the constitution, by invoking the necessary
sections to declare the President incapacitated, we would not have found
ourselves in this present situation.
"As
you can see, adopting extra-constitutional measures have not addressed
the problem. If it had, we would not have been subjected to the raging
debates and controversy going on. So, we must go back to the
constitution.
"The Executive Council of
the Federation must do the right thing because once we start moving
away from the constitution, then we are inviting anarchy.”
Looking back at 2010, from 2017, it is indeed ironical that
President Buhari is now receiving treatment in another country, and he
has placed his vice president, Yemi Osinbajo, as the acting president?!
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