Nigeria’s former leader Buhari to be buried on Tuesday, official says

by Mawuli
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By Macdonald Dzirutwe

Nigeria’s late former President Muhammadu Buhari, who died in a London clinic on Sunday aged 82, will be buried in his northern home state of Katsina on Tuesday, the state governor said.

Buhari, a former military ruler after a coup in the 1980s, returned to frontline politics to become the first Nigerian president to oust an incumbent through the ballot box in 2015. He was re-elected for a second term four years later.

Nigeria’s Vice President Kashim Shettima and government officials were in London on Monday to organise the repatriation of the former president’s remains.

People react while reading newspaper headlines reporting the news of the death of Nigerian former President Muhammadu Buhari at a newspaper stand in Ojuelegba, Lagos, Nigeria July 14, 2025. REUTERS/Sodiq Adelakun Purchase Licensing Rights

Katsina state governor Dikko Umaru Radda said after consultation with Buhari’s family it was agreed the body would arrive in Nigeria on Tuesday for burial the same day in his hometown of Daura.

Among those who paid tribute to Buhari was Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who posted on the X platform that “his wisdom, warmth, and unwavering commitment to India–Nigeria friendship stood out.”

Buhari earned a devoted following for his brand of anti-corruption conviction politics, especially in Nigeria’s largely Muslim north.

A newspaper carrying a headline reporting the news of the death of Nigerian former President Muhammadu Buhari is displayed at a newspaper stand in Ojuelegba, Lagos, Nigeria July 14, 2025. REUTERS/Sodiq Adelakun Purchase Licensing Rights

He referred to himself as a “converted democrat” and swapped his military uniform for kaftans and prayer caps.

Ibrahim Babangida, another former military ruler who toppled Buhari in a coup in 1985, said he knew Buhari as a deeply spiritual and humble man.

“We may not have agreed on everything—as brothers often don’t—but I never once doubted his sincerity or his patriotism,” Babangida said in a statement.

After leaving office in 2023, Buhari spent most of his time in Daura, away from the public eye.

A person displays a newspaper carrying a headline reporting the news of the death of Nigerian former President Muhammadu Buhari at a newspaper stand in Ojuelegba, Lagos Nigeria, July 14, 2025. REUTERS/Sodiq Adelakun Purchase Licensing Rights

His successor, Bola Tinubu, inherited a country grappling with double-digit inflation, foreign exchange shortages, economic hardship, low oil production, and insecurity that had spread to most parts of Nigeria.

Buhari’s supporters, however, viewed him as Nigeria’s conscience because he had a reputation for shunning the corruption and ostentatious lifestyles often associated with the country’s political elites.

To his critics, Buhari was “an absentee landlord—a leader who governed by delegation, who disappeared for long stretches (often to London for medical treatment), and whose aloofness felt like abandonment,” the local BusinessDay newspaper said.

Reporting by MacDonald Dzirutwe, Editing by Ros Russell

Source: reuters.com

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