Buhari’s Administration Inflicting Pain On Nigerians…….says Osinbajo’s 50days as acting President was the best ever.
Nigerian politician and human right activist, Tanko Yakasai said the last two years of President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration inflicted pain and suffering on people.
Yakasai said Osinbajo’s 50 days as acting President when President Buhari was away on medical leave in London earlier this year, was the best time Nigerians have had since Buhari became President.
He said Nigerians have suffered in the last two years of Buhari’s administration and they are still suffering till now.
He also said electricity was stable during the days VP Osinbajo acted as president and that oil pipeline vandalism was put to a total stop during the less than 50 days ruling by Osinbajo.
Daily Post reports that Yakasai said he wished Buhari ‘good luck’ if he decided to contest again in 2019. He said:
“This is in the hands of God. If he (Buhari) is fit, good luck to him. He admitted that things went on fine when Osinbajo acted for him; the vice president is younger, while ill health and military background weaken the president.
“Things were better when the vice president acted because I was getting electricity for eight hours a day, and now since Buhari came back and took over, electricity supply dropped to two or three hours in a day.
“The same complaint in Lagos of people paying electricity bill that they didn’t enjoy, it wasn’t happening when Osinbajo was acting.
“During the short period that the VP acted, there was no blowing of pipelines anymore. “If what happens in this country in the last two years didn’t kill me, I don’t think it will kill me in the next two years.
The suffering was much, I suffer and you suffer. “The other day I got a text message from somebody who complained how he has been suffering, as his pensions had not been paid for over one year, and his children are still in school, I told him, how I was also suffering.
“Everybody is suffering, but if we want to suffer, we can continue the suffering. The Hausa people say, Mutuwar yawa kaka (If death is going to take everybody, not me alone, let it come.)”







