Saturday, 30 May 2015

Buhari Breaks Campaign Promise As Presidency Releases Official Portrait Of First Lady [LOOK]

 
Barely 24 hours after his inauguration as President and Commander-in-Chief of Nigeria, it appears President Muhammadu Buhari may have broken a campaign promise to scrap the office of the First Lady.
 
An official portrait of the wife of President Buhari with complements of the national flag of the Federal Republic of Nigeria to match her new office has been released by the Presidency.
Nigeria's First Lady Aisha Buhari (Photo Credit: George Okoto)
Nigeria’s First Lady Aisha Buhari (Photo Credit: George Okoto)
This is action came contrary to his campaign promise not to uphold the office of the first lady.
Below is the news item from last year where he made this campaign promise:
I won’t have office for first lady - Buhari
General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd)












Presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), retired General Muhammadu Buhari has said he will not have an office for First Lady should he emerge victorious at next year’s presidential election.The [office of] First Lady is not in the constitution, so there’s no official role for them,” he said.
In an interview he granted in Kaduna, General Buhari added that ministries, which are constitutional, should be allowed to play their own roles. “There is the Ministry of Women Affairs, and so on,” he said.
However, Buhari said, women are going to play very important roles in his administration. “I was raised by my mother, as I lost my father when I was under six, so I know what a woman can do if given the chance,” he said, adding that he sees them as his cornerstone.
General Buhari also spoke about the situation in Chibok, Borno State where over 200 schoolgirls were abducted by terrorist group Boko Haram and remain in captivity. “Imagine a mother with a teenage daughter there and for seven months has no clue where she is,” he said, adding that women have to look after a child for at least six years, making the pain of losing a child great.
“Roughly one year in their tummy and from the time they are born until they clock six, children tend to assume they know everything, but it is women, their mothers, who are responsible for them,” he said. “I have the greatest respect for women, he said.
The full interview, in which he spoke on various issues, will be published tomorrow in the Weekly Trust.

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