HAA!!! Is this Truly What Happened to President Buhari in London?
By: Emma Onyema
It is my believe that President Buhari had a form of cancer.
The decision was made that he should go to the UK for treatment.
But I think that is where the root of the current trouble most likely lies because…
…when he went to the UK, the only thing conventional medicine (at that level) knows to do with cancer is…
…administer chemotherapy.
Now what is there to be said of any kind of treatment after taking which your hair begins to fall off.
Chemotherapy is poisonous to the body. Conventional medicine itself acknowledges all the weaknesses of
chemotherapy and your doctor himself will also tell you how highly toxic the therapy is.
It has been wondered by many why this is still being used on people.
After chemotherapy, the individual gets weaker. May even look sicker.
These things have happened to the president and so he does not want to appear before the Nigerian
public that way (not a bad decision at all).
This is just a further exacerbation of the fact that the president is sensitive to being publicly declared
ailing (his opposition labelled him “old and sick” during the campaigns).
Now my take is if he hadn’t gone to London, the physicians would not have volunteered their
first choice poisonous therapy for him.
It has been established that certain foods fight cancers very efficiently. Certain extracts from certain plants.
He would have been at least as strong as he was before leaving (and not needing further time to be stronger thanks to chemotherapy)
if he did not go that route.
Now a far more unacceptable and underlying but largely ignored story directly related to this is the fact that last year, over N3billion was allocated to the Aso Rock clinic (and this year, about the same amount is being proposed) but the president still needs to travel all the way to the UK for medical checkup and health-related issues.
If that is the case, why was N3.2 billion spent on the Aso Rock clinic in the first place. Did that amount actually end up being spent on the clinic? How much of it was actually spent?
Now to be honest, I believe if treated in Nigeria, the involved doctors may have recommended chemotherapy for the president but I want to use the opportunity of the president’s health to draw attention to the absurdity of using chemotherapy to treat anything. Like I said, what can be said of a treatment, which when taken, makes your hair start to fall off.
Onyema writes from Lagos