How
Buhari Spent 1 Year & 39 Days Abroad with Nigeria's Money in Just 3yrs,
10months in Office.
With
few weeks to the end of his first term in office, President Muhammadu Buhari
has spent a total of 404 days (a year and 39 days) travelling to 33 countries
on four continents in about four years of his first term in office, The Punch
can report.
The
country he visited the most was the United Kingdom where he spent 217 days
mostly on health grounds and meetings of Commonwealth Heads of State and
Government.
His
second most visited country was the United States where he spent a combined 41
non-consecutive days.
He
met ex-President Barack Obama and President Donald Trump at different times and
also attended the 70th, 71st, 72nd and 73rd sessions of the United Nations
General Assembly.
France
was the third most visited country with Buhari spending 14 non-consecutive days
there. China came fourth with 13 days and Jordan occupied the fifth position
with eight days.
Other
countries the President visited during the over 46-month period under review
included the United Arab Emirates (seven); Morocco (seven); Germany (seven);
South Africa (seven); Saudi Arabia (six); India (five); Chad (five); Kenya
(five); Turkey (five); Poland (five); and Malta (five).
Others
were Senegal (four); Ethiopia (four); Mauritania (four); Netherlands (four);
Togo (four); Republic of Benin (four); Côte d’Ivoire (three); Iran (three);
Equatorial Guinea (three); Cameroon (two); Ghana (two); Niger (two); Gambia
(two); Egypt (two); Qatar (two); Mali (one); and Sudan (one).
Incidentally,
the President did not visit any country in South America.
Apart
from medical reasons, the President was out of the country to seek security
assistance, improve on the nation’s economy and trade, and seek support for his
fight against corruption.
Findings
showed that while the President was able to build an alliance with neighbouring
countries to curb the activities of Boko Haram, his travels did not translate
much to Foreign Direct Investment except in 2016.
Nigeria
attracted $3.4bn in FDI in 2015 and saw a huge boost in 2016 with the nation
getting $5.1bn.
However,
in 2017, the nation’s FDI took a sharp decline, dropping to $3.5bn, and to
$2.2bn in 2018. Ghana surpassed Nigeria in 2018 as it drew $3.3bn.
Breakdown
of Buhari’s travels in 2015
Shortly
after his inauguration, Buhari on June 3 and 4, 2015 travelled to the Republic
of Niger and Chad Republic for consultations on how to tackle terrorism in the
country and the region.
On
June 7, 2015, he travelled to Germany to attend the G-7 summit and returned on
June 9. He proceeded to South Africa on June 13, 2015 for the African Union
Summit in continuation of talks on anti-terrorism fight and returned on June
16.
On
July 19, 2015, the President embarked on a four-day official visit to the
United States and after he returned on July 23, he proceeded to Cameroon for a
two-day visit on July 29 and returned on July 30.
He
went for the Republic of Benin’s Independence Day celebration from August 2 to
August 3, 2015.
In
September 2015, Buhari embarked on a one-day visit to Ghana on the 7th and a
three-day official visit to France on the 14th, returning on the 16th of
September.
The
President travelled to New York for the 70th United Nations General Assembly on
September 24, 2015 and returned on September 29.
From
October 26 to 30, 2015, he travelled to New Delhi in India for the
Indian-African Forum and on his way back, he made a technical stopover at
Khartoum, Sudan.
From
November 22 to 24, 2015, the President travelled to Tehran, Iran for the third
Gas Exporting Countries’ Forum.
From
November 26 to 30, 2015, the President was in Malta to participate in the 2015
Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.
From
Malta, he travelled to France on November 30, 2015 for the UN Climate Change
Summit and returned on December 1.
On
December 3, 2015, he departed for South Africa to attend the China/Africa
Summit. He returned on December 5.
On
December 10, 2015, Buhari attended the last rites for the late former President
Mathieu Kerekou of the Republic of Benin.
Travels
in 2016
Buhari’s
first foreign trip in 2016 was to Benin Republic on January 8 where he attended
the 11th Summit of the Heads of State and Government of the Niger Basin
Authority.
From
January 17 to 20, 2016, he attended the World Future Energy Summit in Abu
Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
From
January 27 to 29, 2016, the President was in Kenya on an official visit. From
Kenya, he headed to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia for an African Union meeting and
returned to Nigeria on January 30.
From
February 2 to 4, 2016, the President visited France to attend the Special
Session of the European Union Parliament.
From
February 5 to 10, 2016, barely eight months into his tenure, he travelled to
the UK for his first vacation.
On
February 18, 2016, he departed for Egypt to attend the Sharm el-Sheikh ‘Africa
2016’ Business Forum and returned to Abuja the following day.
From
February 22 to 29, 2016, the President visited Saudi Arabia and Qatar. He met
with government officials and also visited Medina and Grand Mosque in Mecca,
where he performed prayers for the peace and unity of Nigeria.
On
March 14, 2016, Buhari visited Equatorial Guinea for two days and had discussions
on agreement on Joint Maritime Policing.
From
March 29 to April 3, 2016, he was in Washington DC attending a Nuclear Security
Summit. He returned to Abuja on April 4.
He
was in China from April 10 to 14, 2016 on a state visit.
On
May 10, the President departed for the Anti-Corruption Summit in the UK. He
returned to Abuja on May 14 but left for the UK on June 6 for his first medical
vacation, following reports that he had an ear infection. He returned on June
19.
On
August 8, 2016, Buhari travelled to Chad for the inauguration of President
Idris Deby and from August 27 to 28, 2016, he visited Kenya to attend the Tokyo
Conference on Africa.
On
September 18, 2016, the President travelled to New York, US where he spent five
days to attend the 71st UN General Assembly.
The
President visited Germany on October 13, 2016 and departed on October 16.
He
spent five days from November 14 to 18, 2016 in Morocco where he attended the
UN Climate Change Conference.
On
November 23, 2016, he travelled to Equatorial Guinea for the 4th Africa/Arab
summit.
From
December 5 to 7, 2016, Buhari was in Senegal where he attended the Dakar
International Forum on Peace and Security in Africa.
On
December 13, 2016, he attended the ECOWAS summit in The Gambia.
Trips
in 2017
The
President’s first foreign trip in 2017 was to Ghana where he attended the
inauguration of President Nana Akufo-Addo on January 7.
On
January 13, he travelled to The Gambia to attend a high-level ECOWAS meeting.
He was in Mali the following day for the 27th African France Summit.
On
January 19, 2017, the President travelled to the UK on medical leave and
returned on March 10 after spending 51 days in the UK.
Barely
40 days after, Buhari travelled again to the UK for medical attention on May 8,
2017 and remained there till August 19, 2017, spending 104 days, a record which
surpassed that of the late President Umaru Yar’Adua.
On
September 17, 2017, he left for the US to attend the 72nd UN General Assembly
where he stayed till September 21.
He
travelled from the US to the UK for medical purposes and returned to Abuja on
September 25, 2017.
On
October 18, 2017, he travelled along with members of his family to Turkey on a
working visit and returned on October 22.
From
November 28 to 30, 2017, the President was in Côte d’Ivoire where he attended
the EU-AU Summit. And from December 1 to 4, 2017, he was in Jordan where he
attended a counter-terrorism summit.
Journeys
in 2018
His
first foreign trip in 2018 was to Ethiopia from January 28 to 30 for the
African Union summit.
Buhari
was in the UK for 13 days from April 9 to 21, 2018 for his annual leave.
From
April 28 to May 4, 2018, Buhari journeyed to the US where he met with President
Donald Trump at the White House where they discussed security and trade.
Buhari
spent seven days away from home and went to the UK for a few hours for what his
handlers termed a “technical stopover.”
Four
days after returning to Nigeria, however, Buhari returned to the UK for medical
reasons on May 8, 2018, and he returned on May 11.
From
June 10 to 11, 2018, the President was in Morocco where three agreements
between Nigeria and the Moroccan government were signed.
From
June 30 to July 3, 2018, Buhari visited Mauritania for the ordinary session of
the AU Assembly of Heads of State and Government.
On
July 15, Buhari travelled to The Netherlands for the 20th anniversary of the
International Criminal Court. He returned on July 18.
President
Buhari travelled to Togo on July 29, 2018 where he participated in the Joint
ECOWAS-ECCAS Heads of State and Government Summit on Peace, Security, Stability
and Fight against Terrorism and Violent Extremism.
The
President again travelled to London on a working leave on August 3, 2018 and
returned on the 18th, spending a total of 16 days.
The
President handlers said during interviews that “he may just see his doctors
briefly during the visit.”
On
August 31, 2018, the President travelled to China to attend a summit on
China-Africa Cooperation and returned after eight days on September 7, 2018.
From
September 23 to 29, 2018, he was out of the country, this time to the United
States to attend the UN General Assembly.
He
travelled to France for a peace forum on November 10 where he spent six days.
From November 29 to December 1, 2018, Buhari attended a regional summit in
Chad.
The
President travelled to Poland on a working visit on December 1, 2018 and
returned on December 5.
On
Christmas Day, he visited Niger Republic to attend the country’s 60th
proclamation anniversary.
Break
from foreign trips for elections
The
President took a break from foreign trips for three months as he toured the 36
states for the 2019 General Elections.
But
after the elections had come and gone, he travelled on April 2, 2019 where he
attended the inauguration of Senegalese President, Macky Sall.
From
April 4 to 7, 2019, he attended the World Economic Forum in Jordan after which
he visited the United Arab Emirates from April 7 to 10 for an investment
meeting. Again, he travelled to Chad on April 13, 2019 for a one-day official
visit.
Write
more editorials –Presidency
When
asked to react to the report on the President’s foreign trips, the Presidency
asked Punch editors to write more editorials on Buhari’s foreign trips.
“Go
and tell your editors to write editorials on it (foreign trips). Your editors
should write editorials; let them write”, Presidential spokesperson, Mr Garba
Shehu, stated in response to an enquiry by The Punch.
Buhari’s
trips, waste of taxpayers’ money –PDP, CUPP
The
Peoples Democratic Party and the Coalition of United Political Parties have
described Buhari’s foreign travels as waste of taxpayers’ money.
The
PDP Deputy National Publicity Secretary, Mr Diran Odeyemi, and the coalition’s
national spokesman, Imo Ugochinyere, said this in separate interviews with our
correspondents on Friday.
Ugochinyere
asked the President to stay back in the country and tackle Nigeria’s challenges,
especially the spate of insecurity across the country.
He
said, “The President has spent over one year out of the period he was elected
to govern the country outside Nigeria.
“After
the travels to different parts of the world, poverty level is still rising and
killings have now become more rampant in Nigeria.”
Odeyemi,
in his remarks, said, “A review of several foreign trips of President Buhari
indicated a complete waste of the country’s resources as against his promise to
block unwarranted foreign expenditures.
“He
broke his promise to equip hospitals in Nigeria towards putting a stop to
foreign trips for medical reasons by spending hundreds of days in London
hospital, receiving treatment. Has our hospital been equipped up till now? NO.”
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