Femi Fani-Kayode sets Buhari 15 challenges to prove he is not Jubril Aminu from Sudan

FORMER aviation minister Chief Femi Fani-Kayode has set President Muhammadu 15 challenges including a request that he takes off his cap and allows he hair to be examined as part of an exercise to ascertain that  he is not an imposter.

 

Over the last month, rumours have been rife that the person currently masquerading as President Buhari is a certain Jubril Aminu Al-Sudani from Sudan. First floated by Indigenous People of Biafra (Ipob) leader Nnamdi Kanu, the story is that President Buhari died while he was ill in London and Mr Jubril has replaced him, in a classic case of impersonation.

 

Wading into the debate, Chief Fani-Kayode, has highlighted 15 questions President Buhari needs to address to disprove the allegations. He urged President Buhari to hold a two-hour interactive no-holds barred live media chat on national television to counter the claim and challenged him to call out Eric Stuart Joyce, the former British MP, army officer and MI6 agent, for declaring him dead sometime in 2017.

 

Chief Fani-Kayode said: “There is always a hidden truth, an angle, a grey area or an unseen dimension to everything that a Nigerian leader or politician says or does. It is in the light of this that I submit the following.

 

[1] “If President Muhammadu Buhari really wants us to believe that he is not Jubril Aminu Al Sudani I challenge him to have a two-hour interactive no-holds barred live media chat on national television.

 

[2] “I challenge him to take off his hat and let us examine his head and hair.

 

[3] “I challenge him to let us measure his ears and inspect his earlobes.

 

[4] “I challenge him to conduct a one hour non-stop conversation in Fulfude, the Fulani language, on national television.

 

[5] “I challenge him to explain how it is that he is now a good deal shorter in height than he was two years ago.

 

[5] “I challenge him to tell us how it is that two years ago he looked like his minister of information’s Lai Mohammed’s grandfather but today he looks like the minister’s grandson.

 

[6] “I challenge him to explain why he has not been going back to the United Kingdom for regular medical check-ups after his miraculous recovery from a strange and debilitating illness that ravaged and wrecked his body and that almost sent him to his grave.

 

[7] “I challenge him to call out Eric Stuart Joyce, the former British MP, former army officer and former MI6 agent, for declaring him dead sometime last year and for accusing the Nigerian intelligensia, authorities, media, intelligence agencies and ruling elite of being complicit in the conspiracy and the Nigerian people of being the most gullible and naive in the world.

 

[8] “I challenge him to explain why he did not appear with any of the key world leaders in any of the official pictures during his last trip to Paris.

 

[9] “I challenge him to explain why President Donald Trump described him as lifeless and ordered his staff never to bring him before him again.

 

[10] “I challenge him to explain why the first lady, Mrs Aisha Buhari, claims that two faceless, nameless, shadowy, strange and all-powerful individuals, whose shoes other government officials lick, are running the affairs of our country and not him.

 

[11] “I challenge him to explain why he has refused to give one formal press interview to Nigerian journalists on Nigerian soil for the last two years.

 

[12] “I challenge him to deny the fact that body-doubles were often used in the civilised world during the 1960’s, 1970’s, 1980’s and 1990’s for security reasons and they often represented presidents, prime ministers and heads of state at official functions and events.

 

[13] “Finally I challenge him to tell us whether it was a coincidence that Haibu Almu, the Nigerian consul-general to the Sudan and National Intelligence Agency agent that allegedly discovered Jubril Aminu Al Sudani and proposed him as a credible and convincing body-double for the ailing Buhari in 2016, was suddenly knifed to death in Khartoum in May 2018 just a few weeks after his alleged role in the whole sordid body-double saga was made public.

 

"I do not believe that Buhari is a clone but I do believe that the body-double allegation and rumour is worthy of our attention and consequently needs to be thoroughly investigated, explored and examined. Although I cannot vouch for the veracity of this allegation and rumour one thing is clear - a significant number of Nigerians do not believe that the man in Aso Rock Villa is the Buhari that they know and rightly or wrongly, their perception is that there is something fishy going on.”

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