The
controversy surrounding President Muhammadu Buhari's real identity appears to
not be fading anytime soon as his 'Jubril from Sudan' identity was fodder for
jokes on American television show, The Daily Show, hosted by South African, Trevor
Noah.
Leader of
the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), Nnamdi Kanu, started a theory in 2017
that the real Buhari that was elected in 2015 had died during one of his
medical trips to London and been replaced by a clone named Jubril from Sudan
with the help of surgery.
Kanu's claim
has enjoyed more mainstream prominence in recent weeks after a former minister,
Femi Fani-Kayode, claimed on his Twitter account that the man in the
Presidential Villa is not the same that was elected.
While
meeting with the Nigerian community in Poland on Sunday, December 2, 2018,
Buhari dismissed the rumours, branding it 'ignorant and irreligious'.
"It's
real me, I assure you. I will soon celebrate my 76th birthday and I will still
go strong," he said.
His response
to the controversy has been the subject of conversation all week as the
international media took quite a hilarious position in reporting it.
Sitting
beside Noah on the show, one of his correspndents, Michael Kosta, said,
"Nigeria's real news sounds like a Nigerian scam email."
While
mockingly speaking in a Nigerian accent imitating a scammer composing a scam
email, he continued, "Dear sir, I'm a real president who's trapped in my
country because they think I'm a clone. Please send me $10,000."
Kosta
further joked that if a cloning technology exists, it would probably be first
tested on 'somebody who doesn't matter' like the Nigerian president.
He said,
"Now, we're supposed to believe that he's not a clone because, you know,
if the CIA did have that technology, they're gonna test it on an African first.
You don't just try that out on rich white people.
"The
CIA chief is gonna be like, 'This might not work the first time, so find me
somebody who doesn't matter. The president of Nigeria? Yes, that's
perfect."
The show is
not the first American TV show to discuss the topic. Jimmy Kimmel, the host of
Jimmy Kimmel Live!, also dedicated around two minutes of his show to put a
hilarious spin on the story.
While many
Nigerians felt the segment, and the reaction of the international media,
brought ridicule on the entire country, Buhari's Senior Special Adviser on
Foreign Relations and Diaspora, Abike Dabiri-Erewa, took to her Twitter account
on Wednesday, December 5, to dismiss its seriousness.
She posted,
"Cracking up on JimmyKimmelLive joke on the issue of @MBuhari cloning.
Jimmy is a comedian. His source of livelihood. The joke is to the stupidly of
even believing in the cloning narrative at all, not on PMB @Omojuwa @segalink .
Won't waste energy on this . That's all."
The
conspiracy theory was fueled by Buhari's frequent medical trips to London as
the 75-year-old spent 154 days combined on two separate trips in 2017 treating
an undisclosed ailment. Despite his health challenges, he's seeking re-election
at the polls in the 2019 presidential election, scheduled for February 16, at
which time he'll already be 76.
Comments