
President Buhari and his family.
The president told his children to be self-reliant, noting that he would leave behind very little for them to inherit.
He
said this in his biography written by American Professor, John Paden,
titled “Muhammadu Buhari: The Challenges of Leadership in Nigeria.
“Buhari insisted that all of his girls continue their education through the tertiary level.”
According to the book: “This
they did, although one continued in higher education after she was
married. He told them explicitly that education would give them
self-reliance, and that he would not have much in the way of an
inheritance to leave to his family.
Today, Buhari’s entire family are not
only well educated but also speak English, and are comfortable within
the broader Nigerian and international context.”
However,
it is difficult to know the president’s worth thereby making it
impossible to estimate what inheritance he might bequeath to his family
since the president is yet to make full details of his assets public.
On
September 3, 2015, Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media
and Publicity provided snippets of information regarding his declared
assets.
According to a press statement
by Garba Shehu, President Buhari had N30 million in his bank account
before taking office on May 29.
Going
further, he said the president owns five houses in Kaduna, Daura, Kano
and Abuja, and has two undeveloped plots of land, one in Kano and the
other in Port Harcourt.
He also has farms, an orchard,
ranch, livestock, including 270 cattle, 25 sheep, five horses, a variety
of birds and a number of economic trees, according to the statement.
He has an unstated “number of cars.”
President
Buhari has one bank account (with the Union Bank), no foreign account,
no factory, no enterprises, and no oil wells, the statement said.
It said the president has shares in Berger Paints, Union Bank and Skye Bank.
Two of his houses in his native Daura are mud-made, the statement said.
“He borrowed money from the old Barclays Bank to build two of his homes,” the statement said.
The documents also showed that the
retired General uses a number of cars, two of which he bought from his
savings and the others supplied to him by the federal government in his
capacity as former Head of State. The rest were donated to him by
well-wishers after his jeep was damaged in a Boko Haram bomb attack on
his convoy in July 2014.”
Premium Times reports that it
remains unclear whether the president plans to dispose of some of these
assets or pass them all to his family.
Post a Comment