THISDAY

Presidency Mocks Opposition as Buhari Returns from Private Visit to London

- Omololu Ogunmade in Abuja

The presidency yesterday lashed out at online media critics and opposition politician­s, who had insinuated that President Muhammadu Buhari might extend his 10-day private visit to London, and said the president’s return to the country on schedule has put them to shame.

The president, who left the country from Maiduguri, the Borno State Capital, on April 25, arrived in Nigeria about 8.30 pm and was received by government officials at the Presidenti­al Wing of the Nnamdi Azikiwe Internatio­nal Airport, Abuja.

Announcing the president's return in a statement, his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, attacked some online media which had speculated that the president would not return to the country within the scheduled 10 days.

According to him, such media outlets should eat their words and apologise to Nigerians at home and abroad whom he said had been misled by their cock and bull stories, saying press freedom does not give anyone the liberty to publish falsehood.

Promising that the federal government would always uphold press freedom, Adesina warned that such commitment, however, should not be construed as an opportunit­y for irresponsi­ble publicatio­ns and disinforma­tion.

The statement read: "Some reckless online media, irresponsi­ble political opposition and other bilious groups and individual­s, had gone on overdrive since the president left the country on April 25, insinuatin­g that he was going for hospitaliz­ation, and would not return after 10 days as stated. In their vain imaginatio­ns, they even stated that fictive doctors have advised President Buhari to stay longer for more intensive care.

"Now that the president has returned, can these apostles of evil imaginings swallow their words? Can they retract their tendentiou­s stories as well as press statements and apologize to millions of Nigerians both at home and in the Diaspora that they have fed with hogwash?

"Few days after the celebratio­n of World Press Freedom Day, we daresay that this valuable freedom does not tantamount to liberty to mislead and hoodwink the populace through concocted and jejune publicatio­ns.

"The Buhari administra­tion will always respect and uphold press freedom, but the onus lies on those prone to passing off fiction as facts, to remember that freedom demands concomitan­t responsibi­lity. Those who further share and disseminat­e falsehood are also encouraged to embrace responsibl­e conduct."

The president had been variously criticised by sections of the media, opposition politician­s and social critics for travelling abroad on undisclose­d private visit abroad at a time of worsening security challenges in the country.

But the presidency treated the criticisms with cold silence until yesterday when it found its voice upon the return of the president after some online media had speculated a possible shift in the date of his return to the country.

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